Lucky Birds by BGaming — Crash Casino Game

BGaming's Lucky Birds is a crash casino game running on what the studio calls Smart Crash mechanics. You pick one of three birds — red, yellow, or blue — and send it flying through a line of pipes. The goal: cash out during a safe zone before it hits one.

Quick note up front — this isn't the old Playson slot, it isn't Crash Birds, and it isn't the LuckyBird Casino brand you might have seen elsewhere. This page is about the new BGaming crash title only.

Release: July 13, 2026 RTP 96.00% Max x12,000
How to play
Lucky Birds — red, yellow, and blue pixel-art birds flying through green pipes over a sunny sky

Game Specs at a Glance

Type
Crash / Casual
Provider
BGaming
RTP
96.00%
Volatility
Low
Hit rate
1.67
Max multiplier
x12,000
Max win cap
€240,000
Release
Jul 13, 2026

The x12,000 figure and the €240,000 figure are not the same thing and don't convert into each other — more on that further down this page.

How to Play Lucky Birds

This isn't Aviator, where you can bail out the second you feel nervous. It also isn't Chicken Rush 2's lane-by-lane step system. Lucky Birds does its own thing: the bird flies continuously through a series of pipes, but the cash-out button only works during short safe-zone windows. The rest of the time, you're watching — no cashing out mid-flight, no matter how the multiplier looks.

  1. 1

    Pick one of the three birds — red, yellow, or blue. Each shows its own risk percentage for that round before you choose.

  2. 2

    Place your bet.

  3. 3

    The bird launches and flies through the pipes as the multiplier rises.

  4. 4

    When a safe zone opens (the cash-out button lights up), you can lock in your current multiplier.

  5. 5

    Hit a pipe before you cash out, and that round's bet is gone.

BGaming hasn't said exactly how long safe zones last or how often they show up, so we're describing the mechanic honestly rather than guessing at a rhythm we can't confirm. The three birds themselves are officially named red, yellow, and blue — but the risk percentage shown next to each one resets every round instead of staying put on a color.

CRASHED!

×16.30

WIN

×580.50

Example round outcomes shown for illustration — not a guaranteed or typical result.

Picking Your Bird

Before a single pipe shows up, you make the call that shapes the whole round: which bird are you flying? BGaming names the three options red, yellow, and blue, and shows a risk percentage next to each one before you pick.

Red Bird
Risk varies every round

Risk percentage resets each round — see the note below.

Yellow Bird
Risk varies every round

Risk percentage resets each round — see the note below.

Blue Bird
Risk varies every round

Risk percentage resets each round — see the note below.

That percentage isn't glued to the color. BGaming's own description says each bird's chance of hitting a pipe is shown fresh every round — so blue showing the lowest number this round doesn't make it the safe pick next round too. Read the numbers for that specific round, not as a fixed low/medium/high hierarchy tied to a color.

BGaming also hasn't broken any of that down by bird — no exact crash odds, no maximum multipliers per color. The game-wide stats (96.00% RTP, x12,000 max multiplier, 1.67 hit rate) cover Lucky Birds as a whole, not any single bird or round. Red, yellow, and blue don't get a fixed risk tier from us, since the game itself never gives them one.

What "Max Win" Actually Means in Lucky Birds

Two big numbers get attached to Lucky Birds, and mixing them up is easy to do.

x12,000 is a multiplier applied to your stake. A $1 bet cashed out right at x12,000 would be worth $12,000, before anything else kicks in.

€240,000 is something else entirely — a flat, absolute cap on any single payout, expressed in euros. It doesn't scale with your bet; it's just the ceiling.

BGaming hasn't published a formula connecting the two, and they shouldn't be treated as convertible. A big enough stake at x12,000 could, in theory, produce a number bigger than €240,000 — in that scenario, the cap is what limits the actual payout. Read them as two separate rules operating at the same time, not one number derived from the other.

1.5× 12× 340× 12,000×

12,000× is the maximum bet multiplier. A separate €240,000 absolute money cap also applies — these are two different limits and are not interchangeable. Markers along the path are illustrative progression points, not a per-bird breakdown.

Full Specifications

RTP96.00%
VolatilityLow
Hit rate1.67
Max multiplierx12,000 (of stake)
Max win cap€240,000 (absolute, separate from the multiplier)
GenreCrash / Casual
MechanicSmart Crash mechanics
ProviderBGaming
Release dateJuly 13, 2026
Bet rangeNot published
DemoComing soon
Distribution at launchLimited servers

RTP, volatility, hit rate, and both max-win figures come straight from bgaming.com. Bet range hasn't been released. On availability: BGaming has said the game is launching on limited servers, so it might not be live everywhere BGaming operates right at launch — expect that to widen over time.

Tips for Playing Lucky Birds

Lucky Birds is RNG-driven. Nothing here is a system for beating the math — just practical notes on how to approach it.

Low volatility changes the whole rhythm of a session. Compared to a high-risk crash game, low volatility here tends to mean more frequent, smaller wins instead of rare big ones. A 1.67 hit rate supports that — rounds land in your favor more often than they would in a high-volatility crash format. Still a statistical tendency, not a guarantee for any single round.

Your bird choice is really a session-style choice — reread every round. Because the risk percentage resets each round instead of sticking to a color, going low risk means picking whichever bird shows the lowest number right then. That suits players stretching out a session with steadier, smaller returns. Going high risk trades that for faster multiplier growth and a bigger chance the round ends early. Neither is objectively better — they're different games to play, and which color holds which spot changes round to round.

Learn the safe-zone rhythm before you commit to a plan. Because you can only cash out when the button's active, you can't decide mid-flight to bail the way you would in a straightforward crash curve. Getting a feel for that timing is the closest thing to skill this game offers.

We're not going to name a "best" bird or hand out per-bird odds — BGaming hasn't released that data, and making it up wouldn't be honest.

Lucky Birds by BGaming vs Other "Lucky Bird(s)" Titles

"Lucky Birds" isn't an exclusive name, so before you go hunting for a demo or a review, here's what else shares it.

Comparison of Lucky Birds by BGaming with similarly named products
Lucky Birds (BGaming, 2026) — this game Lucky Birds (Playson, 2014) Crash Birds (Apollo Games) LuckyBird Casino
TypeCrash / CasualVideo slotCrash gameSweepstakes casino brand
Provider/operatorBGamingPlaysonApollo GamesAtlantic Management BV
StatusComing July 13, 2026Discontinued (delisted 2021)Active, separate titleOffline since January 2026
Format3 birds, Smart Crash mechanics5×3 reels, 10 paylines/betwaysOwn crash formatNot applicable — a casino brand, not a game
Max winx12,000 multiplier / €240,000 cap180,000 creditsNot our focus hereNot applicable

This is a crash/casual game by BGaming, launching July 13, 2026. It shares nothing with Playson's 2014 slot of the same name, which stopped being distributed back in 2021. It's a completely different product from Crash Birds, made by Apollo Games — same broad genre, unrelated studio. And it has no relationship to LuckyBird Casino, a sweepstakes gambling site that went dark in January 2026, months before this game even came out — a claim linking the two showed up in a search summary once, and it's simply not possible on the timeline.

There's also a restaurant called Lucky Birds in Birdsboro, Pennsylvania, plus assorted lifestyle content built around "lucky bird" as a good-luck phrase. None of that has anything to do with this game either — just a name that gets used a lot.

Demo

No public demo yet. As of this writing, BGaming's promo materials for Lucky Birds are labeled "demo and trailer soon" — nothing playable has been released.

Once a demo goes live, it'll typically come through BGaming's licensed operator partners, and we'll link it here directly.

Bookmark this page and check back closer to or after July 13, 2026.

Where to Play Lucky Birds

BGaming builds games for casino operators — it doesn't run its own casino — so you won't find Lucky Birds on bgaming.com itself. Look for it through licensed operators carrying the BGaming catalogue. BGaming holds a number of gaming licenses; check bgaming.com for the current list and confirm any operator's license covers your state before signing up.

BGaming has said this title is launching on limited servers, meaning it may not be live at every operator with BGaming games right away. Check your state's gambling laws and an operator's game library before assuming it's available.

No specific operator partnerships have been named for Lucky Birds yet. We'll update this page as that changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Lucky Birds?

A crash/casual game by BGaming using Smart Crash mechanics, launching July 13, 2026. Pick a bird, fly through pipes, cash out in a safe zone before a crash.

Is this the same as the Playson slot called Lucky Birds?

No. Playson's Lucky Birds was a video slot from 2014 that was discontinued and pulled from distribution in 2021. This is a separate, new BGaming crash game.

Is Lucky Birds the same game as Crash Birds?

No. Crash Birds comes from Apollo Games, a different studio. They're both crash games, but that's where the similarity ends.

Is Lucky Birds connected to LuckyBird Casino or LuckyBird.io?

No. That's a sweepstakes casino brand that went offline in January 2026 — before this game launched. Despite the similar name, and one search summary that implied otherwise, there's no connection.

Is there any link between this game and other businesses called Lucky Bird(s)?

No. There's a restaurant in Pennsylvania and plenty of lifestyle content using "lucky bird" as a phrase, but none of it is related to this BGaming game.

What's the max win?

x12,000 is the max multiplier on your bet. Separately, there's a €240,000 absolute cap. Two different numbers, not interchangeable.

What's the RTP?

96.00%, as published by BGaming.

Is this a high or low volatility game?

Low, with a hit rate of 1.67 — a different feel than high-volatility crash titles.

Is there a demo?

Not yet. BGaming lists the demo and trailer as coming soon. Check back closer to or after July 13, 2026.

Will it be available everywhere right away?

Unlikely at first. BGaming has said the launch is on limited servers, with wider availability expected afterward.

Responsible Gambling

Lucky Birds runs on RNG. No bird choice and no safe-zone habit changes what's underneath the math.

Gambling age requirements vary by state — 18+ or 21+ depending on where you are. Check your local laws before playing.

Use deposit limits, timers, and self-exclusion tools through your casino account if you need them — most licensed US operators offer these.

If gambling isn't feeling like entertainment anymore:

This page doesn't take bets and isn't affiliated with any casino operator.

About BGaming

BGaming is a B2B games provider headquartered in Malta. The studio has been building games since 2012, and the BGaming brand itself launched in 2018. It holds licenses including the Malta Gaming Authority (MGA), and its games run at more than 3,000 casino operators worldwide.

The studio's crash/casual lineup already covers Aviamasters, Dragon's Crash, and Chicken Rush 2 — Lucky Birds is the newest addition, with its own mechanics rather than a reskin of an earlier title.

BGaming publishes RTP figures for its games directly on bgaming.com, which is where the 96.00% figure for Lucky Birds comes from.