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Affiliate Disclosure

Effective: June 2026



This page explains how this website (the "Site") makes money, and what that means for the Aviator content and casino comparisons published here. Aviator is Spribe’s crash game, distributed through a wide range of independently licensed casino platforms. We are not one of them. We are an independent editorial and affiliate publisher.



We think readers deserve to understand the financial relationships involved in any review site. This page is where we explain ours. We have also tried to make it genuinely readable rather than a compliance artifact that answers questions nobody asked.

// How the Revenue Actually Works

Click through to a partner casino from here, register, deposit – the casino may pay us a referral fee. That is the entire model. It keeps this content free.

The fee comes from the casino’s own marketing budget. It does not cost you anything extra, it does not change your bonus terms, and it has zero effect on how Aviator plays. The multiplier climbs from 1x, the Cashout mechanic works exactly the same way, the Provably Fair system verifies round outcomes identically, regardless of how you arrived at the casino. We say this directly because it is the most common misunderstanding readers bring: the idea that an affiliate link costs them something. It does not.

A practical way to think about it: the casino would have spent that marketing budget somewhere regardless. Routing it through an affiliate publisher costs you nothing more than if it had gone to a display network or a sponsored search result.

This also means that the stakes available, the RTP configuration of Aviator the casino runs, and any auto cashout functionality on offer are not influenced by whether you arrived through our link. The game and its parameters are what they are independent of your referral path.

// Partnership Structures

We work with a number of licensed operators offering Aviator. Commission arrangements vary by partner and generally fall into one of these categories:

  • Revenue share – an ongoing percentage of net revenue from players we have referred.
  • Cost per acquisition – a flat fee per referred player who reaches a deposit threshold.
  • Hybrid arrangements combining elements of both.

The specific commercial terms of individual agreements are confidential. The editorial implication of those terms is none, and we mean that precisely: neither the size nor the type of commission has any bearing on which casinos appear in our comparisons or what we say about them.

We know this is easy to claim and harder to demonstrate. The demonstration is in the criteria: see Section 4 for the fixed standard that applies regardless of commercial terms.

// How Tracking Works

Click through to a partner casino and a tracking cookie records that the click came from here. Register and deposit within the attribution window – usually about 30 days – and we receive credit for the referral. That is it. The cookie logs a click and a time. It does not identify you personally, does not follow your activity once you are on the casino’s site, and is not used for any advertising purpose. Our Cookie Notice has the complete technical breakdown.

// Why Commercial Relationships Don't Drive Recommendations

Here is the actual test: can we show that the same standard is applied to every casino we evaluate, regardless of what it pays us? Yes, because we can specify what that standard is.

  • A current, independently verifiable license from a recognized gambling authority – MGA, UKGC, and Curaçao eGaming are the most common for Aviator casinos.
  • Bet limits, withdrawal conditions, and bonus terms stated in plain language.
  • A confirmed, working Provably Fair integration in the Aviator build they are running, and a functional auto cashout option.
  • A demo mode that is actually accessible and functional.
  • Mobile performance we have personally confirmed, not assumed.
  • Responsible gambling tools positioned where players can actually find and use them, not buried somewhere in the help section.

Miss any of those and a casino is not listed. That does not change based on what it pays us. And we do not treat an initial evaluation as a permanent pass: casinos change, and we revisit listings when something material shifts. If a license lapses, withdrawal practices deteriorate, or player sentiment turns noticeably negative, we update or remove the listing regardless of the commercial relationship in place.

// No Guarantees

Nothing on this Site promises what will happen when you play Aviator. The 97% RTP is a long-run average from Spribe, not a session prediction. Bonus terms and bet limits are set by each casino independently and can change without notification to us. Game features can be updated by Spribe whenever the developer chooses. Always check current terms directly before playing.

Specific note on the Cashout mechanic and Provably Fair: we describe how both work based on what Spribe publishes. The actual implementation and the verification tools are provided by Spribe and the individual casino operators – we explain them, they run them.

On Provably Fair specifically: this is a meaningful transparency feature that distinguishes Aviator from most casino games. The ability to independently verify round outcomes after the fact using the seed values and hashes the platform provides is real and worth understanding. But it does not eliminate financial risk, and a provably fair game can still result in consistent losses across a session.

// The Risk Is Yours

Real money gambling carries real risk. If you follow a link from here and choose to play for real, that is your decision and your financial exposure. Aviator deserves special mention here: the game is specifically designed to make waiting feel like the rational choice, because the multiplier keeps climbing and cashing out early always looks like an opportunity cost in hindsight. That built-in pressure is the game’s central mechanic. The auto cashout feature exists precisely to let players enforce a decision made before the round starts rather than during it. We strongly recommend using it, and setting firm deposit and loss limits before any session.

// Where Our Involvement Ends

We have no access to casino systems, player accounts, or player funds, and we cannot mediate any dispute between you and an operator. If something goes wrong at a casino you joined through this Site, contact that casino’s support first, then escalate to their licensing regulator if the issue is not resolved.

Bonuses and Commission Are Not Related

Whether a casino offers a generous welcome bonus or a modest one tells you nothing about how much it pays us. These are entirely separate commercial decisions made independently by the operator. We do not factor bonus size into our editorial criteria, and commission does not correlate with it in any case that we have observed.

// Regulatory Context

Gambling affiliate marketing sits within advertising standards and disclosure requirements that vary by jurisdiction. This page aims to meet the transparency standard common across major regulated markets. If you are unsure whether viewing this content is permitted where you live, check before proceeding.

// Current Version

We update this disclosure as partnerships or applicable standards change. Whatever is posted here at any given moment is the operative version.

// Contact

Questions about our commercial relationships, or concerns that something written here misrepresents a casino’s actual conduct, go through the contact form. We look into this kind of feedback rather than treating it as a formality.

Transparency about how this Site operates is not something we confine to a legal document. Reader trust is what makes an independent affiliate publisher worth reading, and maintaining that trust requires more than publishing this page – it requires actually operating in the way this page describes.