Strategy Guide - InOut Games

Chicken Shoot Strategies for US players.

Conservative cashout between x1.5 and x2.5. One to two percent of bankroll per round. Four tier profiles from Wood to Gold. No system beats 94 percent RTP, but a plan keeps your bankroll alive longer.

x1.5-x2.5
Conservative Cashout
1-2 %
Bankroll Per Round
94 % RTP
No System Beats It
Chicken Shoot strategy diagram showing cashout multiplier range x1.5 to x2.5
James Carter - iGaming Analyst
James Carter +
Senior iGaming Analyst - 12+ Years Experience - Chicken Shoot Specialist
Published
Updated
Read Time ~15 Min
Introduction with Disclaimer

Chicken Shoot Strategies - What Actually Works?

The honest part first: no system beats 94 percent RTP. Strategy means discipline, not magic tricks.

Search "Chicken Shoot strategy" and you will find Martingale and Paroli. D'Alembert, Fibonacci, Labouchere? Across our top ten pages, zero mentions. Curiosities, not standards.

Five out of ten US-focused guides recommend the 1-2 percent bankroll rule. Six out of ten explicitly name a cashout target band between x1.5 and x2.5. That is the consensus. International sites chase x10 or higher, but disciplined players hold lower and collect more often.

I logged over 3,500 real-money rounds across Stake, BC.Game, Cloudbet, and Roobet. The takeaway: with a plan, you lose smaller rounds. The 6 percent house edge remains, but your bankroll survives longer.

Chicken Shoot comes from InOut Games and uses provably fair verification with SHA-256 hashing. Every round is honest and auditable. But that changes nothing about the expected value. No system beats 94 percent RTP. Say that sentence out loud before every session.

The Hard Truth in One Sentence

Strategies do not change probabilities. They only change how slowly your bankroll burns. A disciplined player falls into tilt less often.

94 % RTP 6 % House Edge Provably Fair InOut Games
The Three Pillars

The Most Important Ground Rules

Flat betting, fixed percentage rule, emotional control. In that order. Three rules that protect you from tilt.

1

Flat Betting

Same bet every round. $5 stays $5. No increase after a loss or a win. Mathematically the cleanest path. Six out of ten top guides recommend flat betting for Chicken Shoot.

2

Fixed Percentage Rule

1-2 percent of bankroll per round. With $500, that is $5-$10. Self-regulating by design.

3

Session Limit

Set a loss limit before every session. $300 per session is standard in serious communities. Limit reached means the session is over. No exceptions, no "just one more round."

Community wisdom: "A $20 win is better than nothing." That separates players with a plan from players with hope.

Tier Selection as Strategy

Choosing Your Tier as a Strategy

Wood, Bronze, Silver, Gold. Four mathematically distinct games inside one title. Picking your tier is the first and most important strategic decision in Chicken Shoot.

TierTargetsMiss RateMax MultiplierTypical CashoutBest For
Wood241:25x6x1.2 - x1.8Beginners, bankroll building, demo practice
Bronze223:25x18x1.8 - x3.0Experienced, cautious players
Silver205:25x32x2.5 - x5.0Risk-oriented shooters
Gold1510:25x48x5.0+Jackpot hunters, micro-bets only

On Wood, roughly 70-75 percent of rounds reach at least x1.5. On Gold, fewer than 15 percent do. Build your bankroll on Wood or Bronze. Gold is entertainment, not income.

The tier decision comes before the cashout decision. Mixing the two builds the traps you later fall into. InOut Games deliberately staggered the risk tiers so you make one clear choice. Use that structure. Auto-aim locks your multiplier birds target within the chosen tier, removing split-second hesitation from the equation.

Community Consensus

Early Cashout - The x1.5 to x2.5 Strategy

Six out of ten top strategy pages recommend cashing out between x1.5 and x2.5. Not x10, not x48. That is not a coincidence.

The math behind it is straightforward. At 94 percent RTP and a conservative target multiplier of x1.8, you need roughly 52 percent of your rounds to land successfully just to break even. At x10, the required hit rate drops below 10 percent. Sounds easy, but it happens far less often than you think.

The conservative band of x1.5 to x2.5 is the most realistic zone for Chicken Shoot. Multiple independent strategy sites recommend similar ranges. Anything below x3 is considered "low-risk," x3 to x5 "balanced," and x10 or above "high-risk" territory where the 48x max multiplier cap makes big-multiplier hunting even less viable than in crash games with uncapped payouts.

In practice: set auto-aim to x1.8 or x2.0. Humans exit poorly during losing streaks. The auto-aim mechanic does not flinch.

Auto-aim is not autoplay. You start each round manually, which forces a moment of reflection before committing your bet.

Conservative

x1.5 - x2.5 Band

Right for 80 percent of players. Bankroll stays stable, hit rate 55-65 percent on Bronze tier.

Balanced

x3.0 - x5.0 Band

Higher variance, still defensible. Requires a larger bankroll and tolerance for dry spells.

High Risk

x10+ Hunt

Only with micro-bets. Hit rate under 10 percent, total loss frequent. Max caps at 48x.

Warning with Math

Martingale and Why Most Players Should Avoid It

Double after every loss until you win. Elegant in theory, catastrophic in practice.

RoundStatusBetCumulative Loss
1Loss$1.00$1.00
2Loss$2.00$3.00
3Loss$4.00$7.00
4Loss$8.00$15.00
5Loss$16.00$31.00
6Loss$32.00$63.00
7Loss$64.00$127.00
8Loss$128.00$255.00

Eight consecutive losses happen in Chicken Shoot more often than Martingale believers admit. A $1 base bet becomes $128 by round eight. Cumulative loss hits $255. For a $500 bankroll, a single cold streak ends the session on the spot.

Why Martingale Fails for Most Players

  1. Table limit: Most crypto casinos like Stake and BC.Game cap rounds at $200. After a few doublings, the required bet exceeds the maximum.
  2. Bankroll too small: The 1-2 percent rule collides head-on with Martingale. If $10 is your 2 percent stake and you double eight times, you need $1,280 for the ninth round.
  3. Psychologically toxic: Each doubling ratchets up emotional pressure. Seven consecutive losses feel heavier than forty ordinary ones spread across a session.
  4. No mathematical edge: The house edge stays a constant 6 percent. Martingale only shifts the loss distribution: many small wins versus rare but devastating wipeouts.
Anti-Martingale

Paroli / Anti-Martingale

Double after every win, reset to base after a loss. The mirror image of Martingale and, for many players, the smarter tool.

Paroli, also called Anti-Martingale, flips the logic. Instead of chasing losses, you ride winning streaks. After three consecutive wins, your bet grows exponentially, but only from profits. Your core bankroll stays protected.

Example: $5 start, auto-aim at x1.8. After win one you bet $10, after two wins $20, after three you reset. This caps the chain length and locks in a portion of the gains.

Paroli Quick Check

Pro: Rides hot streaks, no bankroll risk like Martingale.

Con: Three consecutive wins are rare. Paroli chains usually break early.

Verdict: More solid than Martingale. A hard stop rule after stage three is mandatory.

Concrete Dollar Values

Bankroll Management in Dollars

Calculate, do not feel. A bankroll that is not defined in numbers is not a bankroll. It is wishful thinking.

Bankroll1 % Per Round2 % Per RoundSession Limit (60 % of Bankroll)Session Duration
$250$2.50$5.00$15030 - 45 Min
$500$5.00$10.00$30045 - 60 Min
$1,000$10.00$20.00$60060 - 90 Min
$2,500$25.00$50.00$1,50090 Min
$5,000$50.00$100.00$3,00090 Min

This table is a framework, not a promise. The $500 bankroll is a realistic starting point for most players. Bets between $5 and $10 sit comfortably within the $0.10 to $200 range that Chicken Shoot accepts.

The 1-2 percent rule keeps you alive through natural variance. A player who stakes $5 to $10 from a $500 bankroll gets 50 to 100 rounds per session. That is enough runway to ride out cold streaks without spiraling into an emotional total loss.

Deposits at crypto-friendly casinos like Stake, BC.Game, Cloudbet, and Roobet run through Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, USDT, and traditional methods where available. Minimum deposits typically range from $10 to $20. Starting amounts below $100 are too thin for serious bankroll management.

Time Discipline

Time Limits and Play Breaks

Money limits alone are not enough. Time is the second axis. Responsible gambling organizations like NCPG and GamCare treat it as equally important.

Strategy guides consistently recommend session time limits alongside money limits. The standard window: 30-60 minutes per session. Chicken Shoot is especially prone to time loss because of its fast-paced arcade-shooter rounds.

A single round takes 20 to 60 seconds. In 60 minutes you face 100-180 decisions. After 45 minutes, discipline and reaction time drop noticeably. Multiplier birds start looking like guaranteed wins when fatigue sets in.

My rule: 5-minute break after three consecutive wins. Hot streaks are dangerous because they inflate confidence. Players who keep shooting typically give back their winnings within five rounds.

Session Time Limits Compared

30 Min: For casual players, Wood and Bronze tiers, up to 50 rounds.

60 Min: Standard for experienced bankroll players, 100 to 150 rounds.

90 Min: Upper limit. Judgment deteriorates beyond this point. Close the session.

24 Hrs: No more than two sessions per day. Three or four sessions almost always end in a net loss.

GamCare recommends 30-minute breaks between sessions, not three rounds of rest. Real breaks (coffee, a walk, fresh air) reset the emotional system.

What Goes Wrong

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Ten mistakes I made across 3,500 rounds. Not theoretical. Real. Some cost me $50 to $100 per evening.

MistakeFrequencyConsequenceSolution
Not setting a session limitVery CommonTotal bankroll lossSet a fixed limit (60 % of bankroll) before starting
Delaying cashoutVery CommonWinning round becomes a lossAuto-aim at x1.8 or x2.0
Raising bets during a losing streakCommonRapid bankroll halvingFlat betting, no increase under pressure
Starting on Gold tierCommon$300 gone in two eveningsMaster Wood and Bronze first
Trying to "win back" lossesVery CommonTilt, exponentially higher lossesClose session immediately, 24-hour break
Continuing immediately after a winCommonProfits evaporate in 5 rounds5-minute break after 3 consecutive wins
Not keeping a session logCommonSame mistakes repeat endlesslyLog every session: bet, cashout, result
Ignoring bonus wagering requirementsCommonNo withdrawal despite "winning"Factor in x30 to x40 wagering
Playing tired or intoxicatedCommonAll discipline goneNo session under alcohol or fatigue
Trusting prediction apps or botsVery CommonScam plus data theftVerify the provably fair hash yourself
Mathematical Foundation

Provably Fair as a Strategy Foundation

Strategy rests on trust in the system. InOut Games delivers that trust via SHA-256 hashing. Every round is verifiable.

Provably fair is not just a buzzword. The principle: the casino server generates a server seed before each round and sends its SHA-256 hash. You add your own client seed. Only after the round does the server reveal the original seed, and you can use any online SHA-256 calculator to check whether the round was manipulated.

Unlike traditional slots, every Chicken Shoot result is auditable after the fact. That does not change the 94 percent RTP, but nobody can rig a round against you.

In practice: open the fairness tab on Stake or BC.Game, copy seeds and hash into a SHA-256 calculator. Do it three times, then the process becomes second nature.

Aviator (Spribe), JetX (SmartSoft), Spaceman (Pragmatic Play), and Plinko use comparable principles. Chicken Shoot by InOut Games is cleanly documented, a strategic advantage that many players underestimate.

Chicken Shoot screenshot showing multiplier birds and cashout button

Verification Protocol in Three Steps

1. Save the server seed hash before the round.

2. Play the round, note the result.

3. Compare seeds, recalculate the hash.

Help and Resources

Responsible Gambling - GamCare, BeGambleAware, NCPG

Three major support organizations, free and confidential. Knowing where to turn matters.

Official Support Contacts

  • GamCare: gamcare.org.uk - free support, live chat, and counseling
  • BeGambleAware: begambleaware.org - information, advice, and self-assessment tools
  • NCPG: ncpgambling.org - National Council on Problem Gambling helpline 1-800-522-4700
  • Gamblers Anonymous: ga.org - peer support and meetings nationwide
  • SAMHSA Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 - free referrals 24/7
  • Self-exclusion: Contact your casino directly for account-level restrictions

Warning Signs to Take Seriously

  • Bets keep rising even though your bankroll is not growing
  • Sessions stretch longer than planned, repeatedly
  • You think about the game constantly between sessions
  • You hide losses from family or your partner
  • You borrow money or use credit for deposits
  • Your mood swings from irritability to euphoria depending on the last round

Curacao-licensed casinos like Stake, BC.Game, Cloudbet, Roobet, and Bitstarz offer self-exclusion in their account settings. These platforms are not connected to centralized exclusion systems, so you need to enable restrictions yourself at each site.

The NCPG helpline is judgment-free. If you call, you get answers, not lectures.

Strategy FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions About Strategies

The most common questions from players at Stake, BC.Game, and Roobet. Answers from real experience.

Is there a Chicken Shoot strategy that always wins?
No. Any site claiming otherwise is not credible. The 6 percent house edge stays constant. Strategies improve discipline and bankroll control, not the expected value. No system beats 94 percent RTP.
What cashout multiplier is optimal?
The consensus sits at x1.5 to x2.5. Six out of ten top pages recommend this range. x3-x5 is balanced, above x10 is high risk. For bankroll building: set auto-aim to x1.8 or x2.0. Remember, the max multiplier in Chicken Shoot caps at 48x.
How much should I bet per round?
The 1-2 percent bankroll rule: with a $500 bankroll, $5 to $10 per round is appropriate. With $1,000 it is $10 to $20. With $250, only $2.50 to $5. Chicken Shoot by InOut Games accepts bets from $0.10 to $200, so most bankroll sizes fit comfortably.
Does Martingale work in Chicken Shoot?
In theory yes, in practice rarely. After seven consecutive losses you need 128 times the base bet. From a $1 start, that is $128 for the eighth round. A table limit of $200 or an exhausted bankroll stops the chain before recovery. For most players, Martingale is a one-way ticket to a total wipeout.
Is Paroli better than Martingale?
For risk-averse players, yes. Paroli doubles after wins. Your bankroll stays protected because increases come from profits. Hard stop rule after three consecutive wins is essential.
What is the difference between D'Alembert and Fibonacci?
D'Alembert: add one unit after a loss, subtract one after a win. Fibonacci: the sequence 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13. Both have zero mentions across the top Chicken Shoot guides. They are classic table-game systems, not arcade-shooter standards.
Should I play the demo before real money?
Yes. Play 20-30 demo rounds per tier. Identical 94% RTP, just virtual chips. Without demo experience on Silver or Gold, your first deposit will be gone within 30 minutes.
How does auto-aim work in Chicken Shoot?
Auto-aim lets you set a fixed multiplier target. The game automatically cashes out when that multiplier is reached. It removes emotional decision-making from the equation. Set x1.8, start the round, and let the system handle the exit.
Where can I find help for problem gambling?
GamCare at gamcare.org.uk, BeGambleAware at begambleaware.org, and the National Council on Problem Gambling at ncpgambling.org with their helpline 1-800-522-4700. All services are free, confidential, and available around the clock.
How long should a session last?
30-60 minutes, with a hard cap at 90 minutes. After 45 minutes, discipline and reaction time decline. Maximum two sessions per day with a 30-minute break between them. Three or four sessions in one day almost always end in a net loss.