Aviafly 2 Bankroll Management: Making Your Session Budget Last
Aviafly 2 Bankroll Management: Making Your Session Budget Last
Bankroll management is the most controllable variable in Aviafly 2 sessions. The house edge is fixed. The probability distribution is fixed. What a player controls is how much they bet per round and when they stop. These two decisions determine how long a session lasts and how much variance the budget can absorb. Full game parameters at Aviafly 2.
Round Frequency and the Compression Effect
Aviafly 2 produces approximately 200–250 rounds per hour. At $1 per round: $200–250 total wagered per hour. At 3% house edge: $6–7.50 expected cost per hour. At $5 per round: $1,000–1,250 total wagered per hour, $30–37.50 expected cost. The same percentage house edge becomes dramatically different in dollar terms as stake size increases. High round frequency means the house edge expresses itself faster than in slower-paced games. This makes bet-sizing relative to session budget more critical in crash games than in many other formats.
Bet Sizing by Session Budget
A practical guideline: bet per round should be 1–2% of session bankroll. At a $50 session budget: $0.50–$1.00 per round. At a $100 session budget: $1–$2 per round. At a $200 budget: $2–$4 per round. This sizing ensures the session bankroll can absorb the variance inherent to 150–200 rounds before the expected loss becomes the dominant factor. Setting the bet at 10% of session bankroll creates a realistic probability of exhausting the budget within 20 rounds — before the session has provided meaningful play volume.
Session Limits: Setting Before Starting
Set two limits before each session: a loss limit (stop if this total is lost) and a profit target (stop if this total is won). Both should be set in advance, not evaluated in the moment when the session is active. A practical loss limit: 100% of session bankroll. A practical profit target: 50% of session bankroll. If the profit target is reached and you continue playing, the expected value of the additional play is negative — you are risking a won position for further statistical exposure. Pre-committed profit targets remove the temptation to continue indefinitely after a winning run.
How Cashout Level Affects Budget Duration
Low auto cashout (1.5x): win rate approximately 63%, small consistent returns. Budget decreases smoothly and slowly. Provides the most rounds per dollar of session bankroll. High auto cashout (10x ): win rate approximately 9–10%, large infrequent returns. Budget can exhaust faster in losing runs (consecutive total losses at $1 per round). Provides fewer effective play periods per dollar of budget. Both are valid configurations. For players whose primary goal is extended session duration, lower cashout targets extend play. For players targeting a specific large return, higher targets with appropriate budget sizing are the appropriate approach.