Frequently asked questions about JetX
Short, honest answers to common questions: what RTP is, whether you can predict the crash, whether 'predictors' are legal, whether martingale works, why 'signals' are dangerous, and where to turn for help. Each answer leads to a detailed breakdown.
Short, honest answers to the questions asked most often about JetX — from the math and provably fair to predictors, 'signals,' and help. Each answer leads to a detailed breakdown if you want to dig deeper.
The questions are grouped by topic. Click a question to reveal the answer.
Basics: the game and the math
JetX is a crash game: a multiplier rises on screen, and at a random moment the round breaks off. You bet before the start and try to 'cash out' while the multiplier rises; in time — it's multiplied by the coefficient, too late — it burns. More on what JetX is →
JetX was released by the studio SmartSoft Gaming from Tbilisi (Georgia) in 2018. SmartSoft is the game's developer, not a casino: it supplies JetX to operators through aggregators but doesn't accept bets itself. Who made JetX and why →
No. The crash point is determined by a random number generator and locked in before the round starts, and it depends on the server seed, which is revealed only after the round. The growth of the curve on screen is the playback of an already-decided result. How the mechanics work →
Yes, and this is a normal outcome, not a glitch. The share of such instant crashes is built into the game's math and roughly corresponds to the casino's edge — it's mainly from them that it's made up. More on the mechanics →
No, this is a common mistake. The 3% is taken from turnover (the sum of all bets), not from the deposit once. By re-betting your winnings, you cycle amounts larger than your stake, and each bet again loses its 3% — so the deposit can be gone entirely. What RTP and variance are →
No. Whatever multiplier you choose as a target, the average return is the same — 97%, because the probability of reaching ×m is approximately 0.97 ÷ m. The cash-out moment changes variance, not expectation. Why strategy doesn't change the average →
Fairness and strategies
The result of each round is determined by an RNG and locked in cryptographically (provably fair) before your bet — this can be rechecked by hand, and the RNG is certified by independent laboratories. But 'fair' means 'unbiased and verifiable,' not 'profitable': the casino's edge is preserved. Check a round yourself →
It's a way to make sure the casino didn't tweak the result, without taking its word for it. Before the round, the server publishes a hash of the secret server seed; the outcome is computed from this seed, your client seed, and the round number. After the round, the seed is revealed, and you recompute the multiplier and check the hash. Interactive check →
No. Rounds are independent: each one's outcome is determined by a separate set of seeds and doesn't depend on the previous ones. A 'cold streak' doesn't bring a high multiplier closer, and a 'hot streak' isn't more likely to continue — that's the gambler's fallacy. Strategy myths →
No. Doubling after a loss gives the illusion of control, but a long losing streak runs into the limit or the bankroll and wipes out all the small wins at once. In a simulation (×2, a bankroll of $10,000, 300 rounds) about 64% of sessions go to zero, the median is zero. A breakdown of martingale →
Predictors, signals, 'hacks'
No. The outcome is locked in on the server before your bet and depends on the server seed, revealed only after the round; an app on your phone has no access to it and can't reverse the hash function. It has nowhere to compute the future multiplier from. A breakdown of predictors →
No. A signal is a claim about the future multiplier, and it can't be predicted. Some guesses come true by chance, and an 'infallible' history is created by splitting the broadcast, deleting misses, and faked reviews. The channel earns from your deposits via a referral link. How the signal scam works →
No. The outcome is computed on the casino's server, and your device only displays the game — there's nothing to change locally, and provably fair locks in the result before the bet. A 'winning mod-APK' is impossible by construction; in reality it's repackaged malware. Why 'hacks' are dangerous →
No, and there can't be — predicting the outcome would contradict the very essence of provably fair, on which trust in the game rests. Neither SmartSoft nor casinos release predictors. Anything calling itself an 'official JetX predictor' uses someone else's brand for deception. More →
No, these are different games by different developers of a similar genre: JetX — SmartSoft Gaming, Lucky Jet — Gaming Corps (known via 1win), Rocket X — the studio 1win Gaming. They're confused because of similar names and visuals. A comparison of crash games →
Chances, help, and the project
None — all popular crash games have a return of about 97%, so the player's expectation is negative everywhere and close in magnitude. Switching games is a change of design, not a way to sidestep the casino's edge. JetX vs other games →
Warning signs: you play with money you hadn't set aside, you try to 'win it back,' you hide the gambling, you borrow to bet, the game crowds out sleep and work. If you recognize some — it's a reason to pause and reach out for support. Signs and tools →
Help exists, it's anonymous and free. You can set deposit and time limits or self-exclusion right in the casino, take a break, and contact a support helpline or a community. Asking for help is a strong and right step. Contacts and help →
No. On JetXInfo there are no affiliate links, bonuses, promo codes, or calls to play. This is a matter of principle: we explain and warn, not bring you to a deposit. About the project and its principles →
Didn't find your question? Take a look at the topic sections — Basics, Fairness, and Scam breakdown — the same topics are covered in detail there. And if betting has stopped being entertainment, help is anonymous and free: see Responsible gambling.