Ask any group of Bangladeshi casino players which game they spend the most time on, and Aviator will come up before anything else. The Spribe crash game has eaten the BD market. It runs on a mid-range Android, it works on 4G, the rounds take thirty seconds, and the dopamine hit of watching a multiplier climb before you cash out at 2.3x is something no slot machine has managed to replicate at the same speed.
Then a casino puts a welcome bonus in front of those same players — 125% match, 20,000 BDT, 35x wagering — and the obvious next question is: can I clear this on Aviator?
The answer, most of the time, is some version of no. And the reason why tells you something important about how casinos think about game fairness, house edges, and the economics of giving away money. This article explains the full picture: why crash games create an uncomfortable maths problem for bonus design, what contribution rates actually mean in practice, which BD-facing casinos have confirmed their position on Aviator wagering, and what you actually do if you’re primarily a crash game player who still wants to claim a bonus.
Why Casinos Are So Reluctant to Let You Wager Bonuses on Aviator
To understand why casinos are cagey about Aviator and bonus wagering, you need to understand how casinos price their welcome bonuses in the first place.
A casino offers you 10,000 BDT in bonus funds knowing it will cost them something to give you that money. The cost is not 10,000 BDT — it’s whatever the house edge applied to the wagering requirement produces. At 35x wagering on 10,000 BDT, you’ll be betting 350,000 BDT through the casino’s games. If those games carry an average house edge of 4% (meaning a 96% RTP), the casino expects to keep 4% of 350,000 BDT = 14,000 BDT in house edge — which comfortably covers the 10,000 BDT bonus and leaves a margin. That’s the business model that makes bonus offers sustainable.
Now plug Aviator into this calculation. Aviator by Spribe has an RTP of approximately 97%. The house edge is therefore 3% — less than half the house edge of a typical slot. If the casino let you clear that 350,000 BDT wagering requirement entirely through Aviator, they’d expect to keep 3% of 350,000 BDT = 10,500 BDT. They’ve given away 10,000 BDT in bonus and retained 10,500 BDT in house edge — a margin of 500 BDT. That’s thin. Add in payment processing costs, platform overhead, and the variance inherent in 97% RTP crash rounds, and the expected profit on the bonus effectively evaporates.
At the extreme end, consider what happens if a player uses a disciplined low-multiplier Aviator strategy — cashing out at 1.2x to 1.5x every round, grinding through the wagering requirement slowly but steadily with minimal variance. The house edge exposure is minimal, the balance erosion is slow, and the casino has subsidised a long playing session at essentially cost price. No casino in any market is designing their bonus structure around that scenario.
This is why most casinos either exclude crash games from bonus wagering entirely or apply a reduced contribution rate. It’s not a grudge against Aviator players. It’s arithmetic.
How Crash Game Contribution Rates Actually Work — and What “Excluded” Really Means
The game contribution rate is the percentage of each bet that counts toward clearing a wagering requirement. Understanding this is the difference between knowing your situation and wasting a week of sessions.
At virtually every casino in the Bangladesh market and globally, the contribution table looks roughly like this:
Slots: 100%. A 50 BDT bet on a slot counts as 50 BDT toward your rollover. Full face value, no discount.
Table games (blackjack, roulette, baccarat): 5–25%. A 500 BDT hand of baccarat at a 10% contribution rate counts as 50 BDT toward your rollover. To clear the same 350,000 BDT wagering requirement through baccarat at 10% contribution, you’d actually need to bet 3,500,000 BDT in baccarat hands. That’s not a typo — it’s the maths.
Live casino (Evolution tables, Ezugi): 0–10%, often excluded. A 0% contribution means exactly what it sounds like: 100 BDT on live roulette clears 0 BDT of your requirement. You could spend a week in the live casino and your wagering counter wouldn’t move. “Excluded” and “0% contribution” produce the same practical outcome — your bets register, your balance changes, but the rollover bar stays still.
Crash games and Aviator: unconfirmed at most BD casinos, likely 0% or excluded. This is the honest position across virtually every platform reviewed in this series: the contribution rate for Aviator and crash game equivalents is either not published in the public-facing bonus terms, or it appears on a restricted game list with 0% stated explicitly. The absence of a published rate is not the same as a positive rate — it means the casino hasn’t committed to allowing it, which in practice functions like exclusion until proven otherwise.
There’s an important distinction between two types of exclusion:
Hard exclusion means the game is explicitly listed in the bonus terms as contributing 0% or “not counting toward wagering.” Bets can be placed freely during the bonus period, but they do not move the wagering counter at all. Your balance changes based on wins and losses, but the rollover progress stays flat.
Soft exclusion or silence means the game isn’t mentioned in the bonus terms at all. In these cases, the casino may apply a 0% contribution automatically without stating it, or it may count at a reduced rate. The risk is that you play Aviator for a week assuming it’s counting toward your rollover, discover at the withdrawal stage that it wasn’t, and find yourself with neither cleared wagering nor a valid claim against the casino because you didn’t verify in advance.
The practical difference between 0% explicitly stated and 0% silently applied is zero for your bank balance. Always get the contribution rate for Aviator confirmed in writing before playing crash games with an active bonus.
Which BD Casinos Confirm Aviator Counts Toward Wagering — and Which Stay Silent
Here’s the honest breakdown across platforms covered in this review series, based on publicly available information.
Baji Live is the clearest positive example in the entire BD market. Baji has designed a specific bonus product built around Aviator — an unlimited free spins offer on first deposits where the number of spins awarded depends on the multiplier achieved and the bet placed, with Spribe’s Aviator explicitly named as the qualifying game. This is a purpose-built Aviator promotion, not a standard welcome bonus with crash eligibility confirmed. It demonstrates that at least one major BD casino has actively solved the “Aviator players want bonuses” problem with a product designed specifically for them.
Glory Casino shows another approach: a 125% welcome bonus with a 60x wagering requirement in a strict 72-hour window, with Aviator available on the platform. The high wagering requirement and short time window suggest the offer was priced with crash game players in mind — a higher multiplier compensates for the lower house edge on Aviator play. This is the “allow it but price it harder” solution rather than the “exclude it” solution.
Krikya mentions in its platform listing that players can receive a welcome bonus for casino bets and “apply it to the Aviator game” — but this is from an affiliate source rather than confirmed platform terms. It warrants direct verification with Krikya support before treating it as confirmed.
Banger Casino explicitly states that “some game genres can have zero contribution, depending on the rules of the offer” — a diplomatically vague way of acknowledging that game categories are excluded without specifying which ones. The welcome package at Banger is compatible “only with slots,” which effectively excludes Aviator from that specific offer even if Aviator itself is available in the lobby.
Elon Casino, JabiBet, KheliBet, Olymp Casino, Cawabanga: Across the review series, none of these platforms published explicit confirmation that Aviator counts toward standard welcome bonus wagering. In some cases, crash games were actively flagged as unconfirmed in the review process. In all cases, the appropriate response is to ask live support the direct question before depositing.
The pattern: some casinos build Aviator-specific bonuses as separate products. Some allow it at standard wagering but price the bonus to compensate (higher multiplier, shorter window). Most don’t address it in standard welcome bonus terms, which means you should assume exclusion until support tells you otherwise in writing.
The RTP Problem: Why a 97% Game Makes Bonus Math Awkward for Everyone
The 97% RTP figure for Aviator deserves more than a passing mention because it fundamentally changes the expected value calculation for both the player and the casino.
For context: a typical video slot in the Bangladesh casino market carries an RTP of 94% to 96.5%. A well-designed low-variance slot like Pragmatic Play’s lower-volatility range runs around 96.5%. Book of Dead sits at 96.21%. Gates of Olympus varies by operator configuration but is certified between 96.5% and 98.2%.
Aviator at 97% sits at the top of what you’d call the “normal” RTP range for casino games. Blood Suckers by NetEnt (98% RTP) is a famous example of a slot that many casinos exclude from bonus wagering precisely because of its high RTP — even a 2% difference over 350,000 BDT in wagering translates to 7,000 BDT more in expected player retention versus a 96% slot.
What’s interesting about Aviator is that despite its 97% RTP, it carries significant variance. A crash game round can end at 1.00x (instant crash, full loss) or at 1,000x (almost never, but technically possible). This variance means that a player clearing a wagering requirement through Aviator faces more balance volatility than through a low-variance slot, even at similar RTP. From the casino’s perspective, this variance is a partial offset to the high RTP — some Aviator players will bust their bonus balance before clearing the requirement simply because of unfortunate crash timing, even if the average RTP is favourable.
This is why the “priced” approach (allow Aviator at bonus wagering but set a harder wagering requirement) is more mathematically defensible than a flat exclusion for a casino with sophisticated bonus design. A 97% RTP game at 60x wagering produces the same expected house retention as a 96% RTP game at around 40x wagering — the maths works out, just at a different multiplier.
For a player, this means that if you find a casino that genuinely allows Aviator toward bonus wagering, check the wagering rate carefully. A 60x wagering requirement on a crash game bonus means 600,000 BDT in Aviator rounds for a 10,000 BDT bonus. That’s a long grind, but it’s achievable for a dedicated daily player in a 30-day window. The same 60x on a 7-day window is not.
What to Do If Aviator Is Your Main Game and You Still Want the Bonus
If you primarily play Aviator and you want to claim a casino welcome bonus, you have four realistic options.
Option 1: Find a casino with an Aviator-specific bonus. Baji Live’s crash game welcome offer is the clearest example in the BD market. These products are designed specifically for crash game players — the wagering mechanic is built around Aviator rather than slots. The terms are typically different from standard welcome bonuses and are worth reading carefully, but they exist and they’re real. When hunting for these offers, search specifically for “Aviator bonus” or “crash game bonus” rather than “welcome bonus” — the two are different product categories at casinos that offer both.
Option 2: Find a casino that confirms Aviator at standard bonus wagering. This requires asking the question directly in live chat before depositing: “Does Aviator by Spribe count toward the welcome bonus wagering requirement, and at what percentage?” If the answer is yes with a specific percentage, get it in writing (screenshot the chat). This rare confirmation is genuinely valuable. Glory Casino’s approach — allowing Aviator at 60x wagering in 72 hours — shows that some operators have done the pricing work to make crash game bonus eligibility sustainable. They’ve compensated for the higher RTP by setting a harder requirement and a tighter window. That’s a legitimate product design, not a trick — but you need to know the terms before you start.
Option 3: Claim the bonus and plan to clear it through slots, then switch to Aviator. This is the most common approach for players who want both the welcome bonus and Aviator in their regular rotation. Spend the first week clearing the wagering requirement through low-to-medium variance slots — Pragmatic Play’s mid-volatility range, BGaming titles, Hacksaw Gaming — and then switch to Aviator once the bonus has been cleared and your balance consists entirely of cash funds. There’s no restriction on playing Aviator with your own money. The bonus doesn’t lock you out of the game — it just means crash game bets don’t count toward the rollover counter. Some players run this approach deliberately: they enjoy both slots and Aviator, use the bonus week to explore slots they haven’t tried, and rotate back to Aviator once the balance is fully converted to withdrawable cash.
Option 4: Skip the bonus and deposit clean. This is underrated. If Aviator is your game and a casino’s bonus specifically prohibits or doesn’t count crash games, the bonus is effectively worthless to you while you’re in the wagering period — it just locks your balance in a bonus wallet and prevents you from withdrawing freely. Depositing without claiming the bonus means your balance is entirely real money from the start, accessible for withdrawal at any point. For Aviator-first players at casinos with no crash game wagering eligibility, this is often the cleanest option. You’re not missing anything — you’re avoiding a constraint that doesn’t serve your play style. The casino’s game library, bKash integration, and withdrawal speed are the same regardless of whether you claimed the bonus.
What not to do: Assume Aviator counts without verifying, play exclusively in the crash game lobby for a week, and then discover at withdrawal that the rollover bar never moved.
Crash Game Bonus Eligibility in Bangladesh: The Questions to Ask Before You Deposit
After running through the full mechanics, here’s the exact script for the live chat conversation that determines whether a bonus is worth claiming for crash game players.
Question 1: Does Aviator by Spribe contribute toward the welcome bonus wagering requirement?
This is the core question. A yes answer needs to be followed immediately by Question 2. A no answer, or any answer that doesn’t directly address Aviator specifically, means exclusion is likely.
Question 2: What percentage of each Aviator bet counts toward the wagering counter?
100% means full contribution — a 50 BDT Aviator round clears 50 BDT of rollover. 50% means you need twice as many rounds. 10% means you’re effectively in live casino territory — theoretically eligible, practically useless. 0% is functionally excluded regardless of whether the game is listed as “available.”
Question 3: Are there any other crash game titles that count differently from Aviator?
Some casinos treat different crash titles differently. JetX, SpaceMaN, Lucky Jet, and Aviator are all crash format games, but their contribution rates may vary by provider or by the specific title. If you play alternatives to Aviator, ask about each one.
Question 4: Does the contribution rate for Aviator change for different bonus types at this casino?
A casino might allow Aviator at 100% toward a reload bonus but exclude it from the welcome offer. Or allow it in some promotions but not others. The answer to this question determines whether “Aviator counts here” is a general statement or a specific-offer statement.
Question 5: Is there a maximum bet size per round while the bonus is active?
Aviator’s minimum bet is typically around 10 BDT and there’s no hard ceiling on bet size from the game side. But the casino’s bonus terms may cap bets at 200–500 BDT per round while a bonus is active. Playing at 1,000 BDT per crash round with an active bonus, even if Aviator is fully eligible, can void your bonus if it exceeds the maximum bet clause.
Question 6: If Aviator doesn’t count, is there an alternative Aviator-specific bonus I can claim instead?
This is the question most players forget to ask. The standard welcome bonus may not cover crash games, but the casino might have a separate crash game promotion — like Baji’s unlimited free spins structure — that operates under entirely different rules. Ask what crash game offers are available before leaving the conversation.
The five-minute live chat that answers these six questions is the most valuable five minutes you’ll spend before a casino deposit as an Aviator player. The BD casino market has enough variety that some platforms do have genuine crash game bonus eligibility. The ones that don’t are perfectly fine casinos for Aviator play — just without the bonus attached. The worst outcome is the one where you spend a week grinding Aviator rounds against a wagering counter that was never moving.
A Note on the Broader Picture
Aviator’s dominance in the Bangladesh casino market is a genuinely interesting problem for the industry. A game with 97% RTP, 30-second rounds, perfect mobile optimisation for mid-range Android, and playability on a 4G connection has captured a market in a way that no slot machine has managed. The wagering requirement mechanics of the casino industry were built around a world where slots were the dominant game. They’re being stress-tested by a product that doesn’t fit that model.
The result is the patchwork you see across the BD market: some casinos exclude crash games entirely, some build separate crash-specific products, some allow it but price the wagering harder, and most say nothing and hope players don’t ask. The honest approach is to ask, verify, and make the deposit decision based on the actual answer — not the assumption.
If Aviator is your game, there are casinos in Bangladesh where the bonus and the game work together. Finding them takes a five-minute conversation. That’s a reasonable price for knowing where you stand before you put your taka in.
FAQ
Does Aviator count toward wagering requirements at Bangladesh casinos?
At most casinos, crash games including Aviator either contribute 0% or are not addressed in public bonus terms, which functionally means exclusion. A small number of casinos have Aviator-specific promotions or confirmed contributions. Always ask live support before depositing.
Why don’t casinos let you wager bonuses on Aviator?
Aviator’s RTP of approximately 97% means a lower house edge than standard slots (typically 94–96% RTP). Allowing full bonus wagering on high-RTP games reduces the casino’s expected margin on the bonus offer, making it economically unsustainable at standard wagering multipliers.
What is a game contribution rate?
The percentage of each bet that counts toward clearing a wagering requirement. Slots: 100%. Table games: 5–25%. Live casino: 0–10%. Excluded games: 0%. A 0% contribution rate means bets on that game do not move your rollover counter regardless of bet size.
Which casino in Bangladesh has an Aviator-specific bonus?
Baji Live has a purpose-built Aviator welcome offer where free spins are awarded based on multiplier achieved and bet size on Spribe’s Aviator game. Glory Casino has also offered a welcome bonus with Aviator available at a 60x wagering rate.
What should I do if I mainly play Aviator but want a welcome bonus?
Options include: finding a casino with an Aviator-specific bonus product, finding a casino that confirms Aviator at standard wagering, clearing the bonus through slots then switching to Aviator, or depositing without claiming any bonus so your balance is entirely real money from the start.
What is the RTP of Aviator?
Approximately 97%, confirmed across multiple independent sources. This is higher than most casino slots and is the primary reason crash games are frequently excluded from or restricted in bonus wagering terms.
Can I use bonus funds to play Aviator even if it doesn’t count toward wagering?
In most cases, yes — you can physically open Aviator and play with bonus balance, but those bets won’t reduce your wagering counter. You’re effectively spending bonus funds without making rollover progress, which will deplete your bonus balance without completing the requirement.
What happens if I play Aviator during a bonus and it’s listed as excluded?
Your bets are placed normally, wins and losses register on your balance, but the wagering requirement doesn’t decrease. You continue using bonus funds on a game that doesn’t count toward unlocking them. If the bonus funds run out before wagering is cleared, the requirement expires unfulfilled.



