Crocodilo is NexGenSpin’s crash game built around the Bombardino Crocodilo meme. If you found this page by searching the meme first — welcome. If you found it looking for the game — you’re in the right place.
This guide covers everything a player needs to know before putting money in: how the core mechanic works, what the RTP actually means for your sessions, how to verify the provably fair system, and the strategic approaches that give you the best chance of walking away up.
What Is Crocodilo
Crocodilo is a crash game — a genre of online casino game where a multiplier climbs from 1.00x upward and can crash at any point. Your job as a player is to cash out before the crash happens. If you cash out in time, your bet is multiplied by whatever the multiplier was when you hit the button. If the crash happens first, you lose your stake.
The Crocodilo version is built around the identity of Bombardino Crocodilo: the crocodile is in flight, the multiplier is its altitude, and the “bombardino” — the little bomb — is the crash event. When the bomb drops, the round is over. The visual framing is unusually coherent: you are the bombardier deciding when to release the payload (cash out), not the aircraft itself.
The game runs on NexGenSpin’s platform with a clean interface: your bet amount, an auto cash-out field, a live multiplier counter, and the round history showing recent crash points. Each round lasts between a few seconds and — on rare occasions — several minutes.
How the Mechanics Work
Every round of Crocodilo follows the same structure:
1. Betting phase. Before the round starts, players place their bets. You set your stake and optionally set an auto cash-out multiplier. If you set auto cash-out to 2.00x, the game will automatically cash you out the moment the multiplier hits 2.00x — you don’t need to click anything.
2. Flight phase. The round begins. The multiplier starts at 1.00x and climbs. The rate of increase is not linear — it accelerates as the multiplier grows, which is why high multipliers feel dramatic. At 10x the climb is faster than at 2x. At 50x it is faster still.
3. The crash. At a point determined by the RNG before the round begins, the bomb drops and the multiplier freezes. Anyone who has not cashed out loses their bet. Anyone who cashed out before the crash keeps their winnings.
4. Result. The crashed multiplier is displayed and added to the round history. A new round begins within a few seconds.
The crash point distribution is not uniform. Statistically, most rounds crash at low multipliers. Roughly 50% of rounds crash below 2x. Rounds that reach 10x or higher are genuinely uncommon. Rounds above 100x occur in approximately 1% of cases. This distribution is what shapes every strategic decision in the game.
RTP and House Edge
Crocodilo carries an RTP (Return to Player) of 97% and a house edge of 3%.
These numbers mean something specific. Over a very large number of rounds — thousands, not tens — the game is mathematically designed to return $97 for every $100 wagered. The missing $3 is the casino’s margin. This is baked into the crash point distribution: the RNG is calibrated so that the expected value of any single bet, at any multiplier target, is $0.97 per dollar wagered.
A 3% house edge is below average for online casino games. Slots typically run a house edge of 4–8%. Roulette runs 2.7% (European) to 5.26% (American). Crocodilo’s 3% edge is in the range of blackjack with basic strategy — better than most table game variants you’ll find at online casinos.
What this does NOT mean: it does not mean you will win 97% of your bets. In a single session of 50 rounds, variance will push your result well above or below 97% of stakes. The RTP is a long-run statistical property, not a session guarantee. Short sessions are dominated by variance; the house edge dominates only over thousands of rounds.
The Provably Fair System
Crocodilo uses a provably fair RNG — a cryptographic verification system that allows players to confirm the crash point of any round was not manipulated after bets were placed.
Here is how it works:
Before the round: The server generates a hash of the crash point value and displays it publicly before the round begins. You can see this hash in the game interface. It is a commitment — the crash point is “locked in” before betting opens.
After the round: The crash point value is revealed. You can independently verify that the displayed hash matches the crash value using any standard SHA-256 hashing tool. If the casino had changed the crash point after seeing where bets were placed, the hash would not match.
Client seed: Players can also input their own client seed, which combines with the server seed to generate the round result. This ensures that even if the server seed were somehow predictable, the client seed randomizes the output.
To verify a round: take the revealed server seed + your client seed + round nonce, run them through the published algorithm, and confirm the output matches the stated crash point. NexGenSpin publishes the verification algorithm in the game’s fairness documentation.
This system does not remove the house edge — it simply proves that the house edge is the only thing working against you, not manipulation.
Strategy for Crocodilo
No strategy changes the RTP. Every round, every multiplier target, every betting system returns $0.97 per dollar wagered in expectation. Strategy in crash games is about managing variance, session length, and the psychological pressure of the format.
Low variance approach — auto cash-out at 1.5x–2x: Set your auto cash-out at 2.00x and leave it. You will win approximately 49% of rounds. Each win returns double your stake; each loss costs your stake. The math produces slow, steady erosion of the 3% house edge with minimal dramatic swings. This is the approach for players who want extended play time with a fixed budget.
Medium variance approach — 3x–5x target: Cash out targets in the 3x–5x range win less often (roughly 20–30% of rounds) but produce larger wins when they hit. Session results are bumpier. You might lose 10 rounds in a row before a 4x win recoups most of it. Bankroll swings are wider. Suitable for players comfortable with variance.
High variance approach — 10x+: Targeting 10x or higher wins fewer than 10% of rounds. A single hit at 10x on a 1-unit stake returns 10 units — but you will lose 9 or more bets before it happens on average. At 50x, the expected number of losses before a hit is roughly 50. This is not a “strategy” in a meaningful sense — it is choosing high-variance entertainment over low-variance entertainment. The expected value per dollar is identical.
Session bankroll management: Regardless of multiplier target, treat each session as a fixed budget. A minimum session bankroll is 100 units at your chosen bet size. If you bet $1 per round, bring $100. This gives you enough rounds to experience the statistical distribution without going bust in the first 10 crashes.
Crocodilo vs Other Crash Games
The crash game genre is populated with well-established titles. Here is how Crocodilo compares to the two most prominent:
| Game | Provider | RTP | Theme | Distinguishing feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Crocodilo | NexGenSpin | 97% | Brainrot meme / WWI | Meme-native branding, clean interface |
| Aviator | Spribe | 97% | Aviation | Largest player base, social features |
| JetX | SmartSoft | 97% | Jet aircraft | Multi-bet (3 simultaneous positions) |
The RTP across all three is identical at 97% — the mathematical expectation is the same regardless of which you play. The differences are interface, social features, and branding.
Aviator is the market leader and carries the most social proof — a live feed of other players’ cash-outs runs alongside the game, which some players find useful as behavioral reference and others find distracting. JetX’s multi-bet feature allows placing up to three simultaneous bets at different cash-out targets in the same round, which can be used to hedge (though not to change expected value).
Crocodilo’s distinction is its origin: it is the only crash game built around a meme character with genuine organic search demand. Players who arrive from the meme have a contextual relationship with the character that Aviator and JetX cannot replicate. The game is also newer, which means its round history database is shorter — useful to know if you rely on historical crash data for reference.
For strategy specifics and bankroll approaches, see the Bombardino Crocodilo strategy guide.