Anastasia Rimskaya is the Chief Account Officer at Aviatrix, a company known for its innovative approach to crash games. Aviatrix stands out in the iGaming market by integrating NFTs into gameplay, allowing players to customize their experience with personal touches.
Anastasia explained that Aviatrix was founded less than two years ago with the goal of bringing a new dimension to the iGaming sector. Since its inception, the company has received numerous accolades, including the SBC Awards and EGR Awards.
“Our focus is on adding features that elevate the player experience. One of our recent milestones is introducing promo codes with free bets, which allow players to unlock rewards in-game,” said Anastasia.
What makes Aviatrix unique is its feature that allows players to create their own NFT planes. Players can customize their planes by changing the color, details, and even adding a personal name to the aircraft. These planes then appear during gameplay, offering a more personalized and immersive experience.
“Customization is key for both players and operators,” said Anastasia. “Operators can also display their logos or branding in-game, enhancing the overall brand visibility.”
As part of their commitment to responsible gaming, Aviatrix leverages blockchain technology to ensure transparency and fairness. Players can track every bet, and the company is compliant with strict regulatory standards in regions such as Malta, Romania, Italy, and Greece.
Anastasia emphasized, “Responsible gaming is something we take very seriously. Blockchain allows us to ensure players are safe and that our games meet regulatory requirements.”
For those who haven’t tried Aviatrix yet, Anastasia encourages them to give it a shot, especially with the upcoming tournament featuring a 3 million EUR prize pool. “Just create your NFT plane, place a bet, and you’re already participating,” she added.
Aviatrix uses the classic crash game mechanic. The difference is in production quality, loyalty tools, and deep personalization for players and partners.
“We aim for high quality production like top video games.”
Aviatrix runs large network tournaments powered by loyalty tools such as free bets. “We just distributed 4 million euros in our last tournament across our network,” the team shared.
Players can create and customize their own plane skins with different colors and names. Progression is tied to play:
Aviatrix is rolling out personalized planes that look entirely different from the base game assets. Some skins are tied to specific events and can be equipped by players after the new update.
A new feature is lootboxes, triggered when a player reaches a spend milestone within 24 hours. These offer:
For creators and partners, Aviatrix can issue a dedicated plane skin and distribute it via promo codes. Activations can be capped to keep drops exclusive. “A streamer can share a code during the show, limited to the first 10 or 100 activations,” the team explained.
In our third interview with Anastasia Rimskaya from Aviatrix, recorded at iGB Live London 2026, the discussion focused on how Aviatrix has grown from a crash game into a broader product ecosystem. The main topic was the company's new direction: the Aviatrix iGaming Metaverse.
Anastasia explained that Aviatrix had been preparing for the move from a single game provider to a wider iGaming product ecosystem. This new direction was officially presented during the Barcelona iGaming Expo and launched shortly after.
“We were preparing for this moment to switch from a single game provider to iGaming Metaverse.”
In the Aviatrix case, the term metaverse does not mean a virtual reality world. It means a connected gaming ecosystem where different titles, player profiles, rewards, and retention features are linked together.
Players can use the same profile across Aviatrix games. Their plane, character, progression, and rewards are part of one connected experience.
“It is a unique ecosystem which has everything together.”
Aviatrix is expanding beyond its original crash game with new titles such as Second Chance, Fruits, Mines, Fortunes, and Plinko. These games are designed with the same Aviatrix style and production quality.
The goal is to keep the visual identity, player profile, and engagement features consistent across the full ecosystem.
“Everything is designed in the same style of Aviatrix.”
One of the main ideas behind the ecosystem is that players do not need to leave the game and return to the casino lobby to discover new Aviatrix titles. They can explore other games from inside the Aviatrix environment.
This also means that tournaments, progression, and player activity can grow across different games, not only inside one title.
Anastasia highlighted that player acquisition has become one of the most expensive and difficult challenges for operators. For this reason, retention and reactivation tools are very important.
Aviatrix uses features such as:
“Player retention and reactivation is the best right now.”
Aviatrix is also focusing on market expansion. Anastasia described the United States as one of the biggest regulated markets and a priority for the company. Licensing work is already in progress, and Aviatrix is speaking with major operators and market players.
Latin America is another key region for Aviatrix. The company has a dedicated team in the region and recently held a partner meetup with important Latin American partners.
Colombia was also mentioned as an important market, with Aviatrix planning a stronger presence there.
Looking ahead to the rest of 2026, Anastasia mentioned that Aviatrix launched its first brand with Flutter at Betnacional in Brazil. The company is also continuing talks with operators in the United States.
The broader plan is clear: continue growing across regulated markets, expand the Aviatrix ecosystem, and introduce more new titles to partners and players.
“Stay tuned and check Aviatrix new titles.”