Paylines
Place bet, watch the multiplier climb, cash out before the plane disappears off-screen
Forget reels. Crocodilo is NexGenSpin's take on the crash format popularized by Aviator, dressed up with the viral pixel-cartoon reptile that's been clogging social feeds for months. The premise sits at roughly five seconds of reading. A green crocodile, jammed into the open cockpit of a beaten-up grey propeller fighter, takes off across a backdrop that flips between starlit night skies and a sun-bleached tropical shore. A small crab sometimes walks the sand between rounds. The multiplier climbs from 1.00x in real time. At some random altitude the plane vanishes off the edge of the screen, and any bet still riding goes with it.
Your job is to bail first. Two independent bet panels stack side by side at the bottom of the screen, each with its own stake field, half/double doublers, preset chips at 0.01, 0.05, 0.25 and 0.50, plus toggles for Autobet and Autocashout. Running both panels at once is the standard play, usually paired with a safe early autocashout on one and a manual gut-pull on the other. Minimum stake is a single cent, demo balance starts at $10,000, and a tiny latency badge near the bet area sits around 27 to 30ms so you can see the connection is honest.
The top strip is where you read the room. A sample run pulled from the history bar went 1.92, 529.64, 1.26, 2.73, 1.00, 6.37, 1.09, 1.83, then crawled through a stretch of single-digit results before another 20.49 and a 20.31 popped up. Most rounds bust under 3x. The fat hits aren't frequent, but they exist. Volatility is high and the math reflects that.
The honest gripe? There's nothing to actually do here. No bonus buy, no upgrade meter, no jackpot wheel. You set a number, you press a button, you decide when to flinch. If you need progression or a story, this won't scratch it. But for sessions where you'd rather think than spin, where one decision per round is the whole point, Crocodilo lands the format cleanly and adds enough silly personality to keep it from feeling like another Aviator reskin.