Set a session budget first

Before choosing a bottle or target multiplier, decide how much you are comfortable spending in the session. That amount should be separate from money you need for anything else.

Once the session budget is set, divide it into smaller bets. This gives you more rounds to learn the game instead of putting too much pressure on one outcome.

Choose your cashout range

A cashout range is easier to follow than a vague goal. For example, you might decide to use early targets for most bets and only take occasional higher-risk shots.

Auto cashout can help because it turns your plan into a setting. Read the auto cashout strategy article for practical target examples.

Stop after your limit

The hardest part of crash games is stopping after a win or loss. Decide your stop conditions before the first round: a profit target, a loss limit, or a fixed number of rounds.

Bottle Crash is fast, so this discipline matters. If you are still new, pair this checklist with the crash game basics guide.

A simple checklist before pressing play

Before starting a session, write down three numbers: your total session budget, your normal bet size, and your stop point. These numbers do not need to be complicated, but they should be decided before the multiplier starts moving.

Next, choose your default cashout style. Some players prefer early targets, some prefer a mixed approach with two bets, and some prefer occasional high-risk rounds. What matters is that the choice is intentional.

Finally, avoid increasing stakes just because a few rounds did not go your way. Crash games can move quickly, and fast losses often come from changing the plan too often. Slow, clear decisions usually beat emotional adjustments.

Quick FAQ

Is there a risk-free crash strategy?

No. Any strategy can lose because the crash point is random.

Should I increase bets after a loss?

Chasing losses is risky. Fixed stake sizes are usually easier to manage.