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Frequently asked questions about Rocket X

Play, but responsibly!

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🎮 Game and rules

Basic mechanics, interface, and round parameters.

It's a feed of the last 20–50 multipliers at which the crash occurred in previous rounds. Many players use it for "forecasting" — for example, they see a series of low multipliers and think "a high one is due." This is the classic gambler's fallacy: each round is independent of the previous ones, the generator has no memory. The history is useful only as information about the RTP over recent rounds, not as a prediction tool.
The minimum bet is usually 0.10 of your account currency, and the maximum is 600–1000 units for a standard account. These are the limits of the specific casino, not the game itself. For VIP accounts the ceiling can be higher, for new accounts sometimes lower. The exact values are shown right in the betting interface.
It's not "doubling" or "insurance," as people often think. These are two completely independent bets with different auto-cashout settings. Many use it as a tactic: one bet with a low cash-out (1.3×, frequent win), the other with a high one (10×, for luck). Mathematically this is equivalent to a single bet of double the size: the RTP applies to each unit of currency independently. More on this in "Rules of the game."
RTP (Return to Player) is the share of bets that the game returns to players on average over the distance. Rocket X's stated RTP is about 96% — meaning the casino's house edge is about 4%. That's one percent lower than Aviator or Lucky Jet (97%) — the trade-off for a wider range of multipliers and rare large wins up to 100,000×. The parameter is set by the developer 1win Gaming and certified by an independent lab. The specific value is shown in the "Game information" or "Help" section inside the game interface.
Yes, most licensed casinos where Rocket X is available have responsible-gambling tools: a daily/weekly/monthly deposit limit, a session time limit, a loss limit. Find the "Responsible Gambling" section in your account settings. These limits usually can't be increased instantly — an increase takes effect after 24–72 hours. This is done deliberately, so that the decision isn't made in an emotional state.

🔐 RNG and fairness

Provably Fair cryptography and verifying rounds.

It's a system in which, before a series of rounds begins, the casino fixes the result via a cryptographic hash and publishes it. After the series ends, the original value (server seed) is revealed, from which each round can be recalculated to confirm the result wasn't tampered with. The player doesn't need to trust the casino — they verify mathematically. A detailed breakdown is on the "How the RNG works" page.
With a correctly implemented Provably Fair — no. The SHA-256 hash of the server seed is published BEFORE the series of rounds. If, after the series, the revealed seed produces a different hash, the deception is immediately visible to anyone who can compute SHA-256. So tampering with a specific round after the fact is impossible without exposing the fraud. This is a mathematical property of the hash function, not a "casino's promise."
You need the server seed (revealed after the series), your client seed, the nonce (round number), and the published hash. Using a simple Python script (or third-party Provably Fair online calculators), you recompute the SHA-256 of the server seed — it should match the published one. Then, using the HMAC-SHA256 formula, you recompute the multiplier and compare it with the actual one. A ready-made verify.py script is on the "How the RNG works" page.
Classic certification (eCOGRA, GLI, iTech Labs, BMM Testlabs) is a statistical audit of a large sample of results in a lab. The auditor confirms that the generator is fair "on average," but the player can't verify a specific round — they trust the auditor. Provably Fair removes the middlemen: each round is verified mathematically right in the browser. In practice, Rocket X has both — 1win Gaming's lab certification plus Provably Fair.
It's a theoretical attack in which, before a series begins, the casino generates a thousand candidate server seeds, looks at the distribution of multipliers, and picks the least favorable one for the player. Formally the hash is of the chosen seed — "fair," but the casino used foreknowledge. The defense: set your own client seed manually (rather than accepting an automatically generated one). Then the casino can't predict the resulting multiplier and can't "cherry-pick" it.

💳 Finances and withdrawals

Deposits, withdrawals, KYC, and taxation.

It depends on the casino, not the game itself. Minimum deposits are usually small — often the equivalent of just a few dollars — and minimum withdrawals are typically a bit higher. The payment method matters too: bank cards usually have a low minimum, while cryptocurrency often starts from around $10–20. The exact amounts are listed in the "Cashier" section of your account.
It depends on the method and the casino. Cryptocurrencies — usually from 15 minutes to 2 hours. E-wallets — up to 24 hours. Bank cards — 1–3 business days, in rare cases up to 5. If a withdrawal is delayed longer than the typical time, it may be related to a KYC check or suspicion of bonus abuse — contact support.
KYC (Know Your Customer) is the procedure for verifying a player's identity: uploading a scan of an ID, a selfie with the document, sometimes proof of address. It's a mandatory requirement of Curaçao, MGA, UKGC, and other regulators' licenses — formally to combat money laundering and fraud. KYC is usually carried out before the first large withdrawal (from $200–500). Without completing it, withdrawals are blocked.
Yes, at practically every casino. Typical limits: $10,000 a day, $50,000 a week, $200,000 a month for a standard account. If you won more — the money is paid out in parts, over several days or weeks. For VIP accounts the limits are higher or absent. The specific values should be in the casino's Terms & Conditions — a public document.
It depends entirely on your country. In some jurisdictions, gambling winnings are taxable income that the player must declare themselves (for example, through an annual tax return), especially when the operator holds only an offshore license like Curaçao and doesn't act as a tax agent. In others — typically where the operator is taxed directly — winnings from licensed operators are tax-free for the player, while winnings from unlicensed sites may still be subject to declaration. Check the rules for your specific country.

⚠️ Strategies, signals, apps

What works, what's a scam, and where the red flags are.

No. The expected value of any bet in Rocket X is −3% regardless of the chosen cash-out multiplier and the bet-changing scheme. Martingale, Fibonacci, the "1.5× rule" — all these strategies only redistribute the variance (when and how you lose), but don't change the expected result. A detailed mathematical breakdown is on the "Strategy myths" page.
Free ones are often more dangerous than paid ones. Their business model is CPA affiliate deals with a specific casino: the channel gets $30–150 per registered player + a 25–50% RevShare on all future losses. The more you lose, the more the channel earns. "Free" isn't kindness — it's a different business model with a direct conflict of interest. The anatomy of scam channels is on the "The truth about signals" page.
These are Android apps promising to "predict the moment of the crash." Prediction is technically impossible (see the RNG article), so 100% of such apps are either: 1) ad wrappers that hook you into a CPA affiliate deal; 2) personal-data harvesters; 3) banking trojans that, after installation, steal SMS codes and access to your mobile bank. Never install APKs with predictors — it's a direct path to losing not just your deposit but your entire bank-card balance.
Bots that place bets automatically — yes, they exist, and casinos are neutral toward them (the RTP is negative anyway). Bots that "guess" the moment of the crash — no, they can't exist, for the same reason as signals: a round's outcome is set before it starts and is inaccessible to an outside observer. Any "predictor bot" is either the game's own built-in auto-cashout at a fixed number (which is available for free in the settings anyway) or a scam.
With four standard tricks: 1) cherry-picking — they publish only the signals that hit and quietly delete the rest; 2) retroactive editing — Telegram allows editing a post after publishing, and the numbers are adjusted to match the real result; 3) fake screenshots — balances and winnings are drawn in Photoshop or online generators; 4) playing in demo mode — the screenshots are indistinguishable from playing with real money. A detailed breakdown is on the "The truth about signals" page.

💙 Responsible gambling

Signs of a problem and help contacts.

Gambling addiction is a medical diagnosis with specific criteria. The nine DSM-5 signs include: preoccupation with gambling during non-gambling time, the need to increase bets for the same excitement, unsuccessful attempts to quit, gambling as a way to escape problems, chasing losses, lying to loved ones. If, over a year, four or more apply, that's a formal basis for a diagnosis. The full list with a self-check is on the "Responsible gambling" page.
In the "Responsible Gambling" section of your account, find the limit settings: a daily/weekly/monthly deposit limit, a session time limit, a loss limit. Set them NOW, while calm. Most licensed casinos let you lower limits instantly, but raise them only 24–72 hours after the request. This is a deliberate protection against impulsive decisions. There's also a full self-exclusion feature — blocking the account for anywhere from 6 months to a lifetime.
Don't pressure directly, don't control their finances for them, and don't pay off their debts — that reinforces the role of "victim of circumstances." What works: specific "I" statements instead of accusations, clear boundaries of your own ("I won't lend you money anymore"), offering options for help without coercion. In parallel, take care of yourself — for the loved ones of addicted people there are Gam-Anon groups. A full breakdown of the approach is on the "Responsible gambling" page.
Several options, all free and confidential: the UK National Gambling Helpline on 0808 8020 133 (24/7, run by GamCare); GamCare (gamcare.org.uk) for free counselling and 24/7 live chat; Gambling Therapy (gamblingtherapy.org) for free online support worldwide in several languages; Gamblers Anonymous (gamblersanonymous.org) for 12-step meetings in many countries. Many countries also run their own national gambling helplines. The full list of contacts is on the "Responsible gambling" page.
If you played at a licensed casino and lost in fair games — practically no. It's a legal transaction, and the issuing bank won't dispute it. Exceptions: if the casino isn't licensed in your jurisdiction — a chargeback is theoretically possible, but the chances are below 30%. If the money was paid for "VIP access to signals" in a scam channel — a chargeback is possible, especially within 30–60 days of payment, with the argument "the promised services were not provided." A detailed plan for those affected is on the "The truth about signals" page.

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