Step Crash Game

Chicken Kitchen — Play the Step‑Crash Game by BetOnGames

Chicken Kitchen is a crash game from BetOnGames (Betcore) — and yes, the name is confusing if you live near a Chicken Kitchen restaurant. The mechanic runs on fryer stations: your chicken steps through a kitchen line one station at a time, multipliers stack up, and you decide when to pull out. Three difficulty modes, max win x10,000, provably fair.

Max Win x10,000
Difficulty Modes 3 Modes
Min Bet €0.10
Fairness Provably Fair
How to Play Demo not publicly available yet — check with your operator for access.

Game at a Glance

Key Specifications

Parameter Value Note
Game type Step-crash Fryer station progression
Theme Kitchen / fryer Cartoon kitchen setting
Max win x10,000 Source: GamblingTalk, 13.05.2026
Min bet €0.10 Source: GamblingTalk, 13.05.2026
Provider BetOnGames / Betcore
Provably fair Yes
RTP Not publicly verified See RTP & Fairness section below
Difficulty modes Easy / Normal / Hardcore

Verified specs from GamblingTalk (May 13, 2026). RTP was not disclosed at launch.

How Chicken Kitchen Works

If you've played Aviator or JetX, you know the drill: one multiplier, it goes up, you wait too long and it crashes. Chicken Kitchen does something different. The fryer line has separate stations — the chicken hits one, you decide, then it moves to the next. No single curve to watch. Every stop is a fresh call.

  1. Pick a difficulty mode. Easy, Normal, or Hardcore — each changes how many fryer stations are in the run and the risk profile. New players usually start with Easy.

  2. Set your bet. Minimum is €0.10. Max bet depends on your operator.

  3. The chicken moves. It steps toward the first fryer station. A multiplier appears above it.

  4. Cash out or continue. Once the chicken reaches a station, you decide. Hit cash out and you lock in the multiplier. Keep going and the chicken moves to the next station with a higher multiplier.

  5. The crash happens. At some point the fryer wins — the chicken doesn't make it through. If you didn't cash out before that, the bet is lost.

  6. Provably fair verification. Every outcome can be independently verified. You can check the result using the provably fair tools after each round.

Step-crash mechanic diagram: chicken advancing through 4 fryer stations with increasing multipliers — x1.5, x2.5, x5.0, and final glowing station
In Aviator, there's one moment to time. In Chicken Kitchen, there are multiple. That's not necessarily easier — some players find more decision points means more chances to second-guess themselves.

Easy, Normal, Hardcore — What Each Mode Changes

Most crash games give you one format and that's it. Chicken Kitchen has three. Each mode changes what the run actually looks like — not just the branding on the button.

Three difficulty mode cards: Easy (green), Normal (amber), Hardcore (red) — showing progressive risk levels
Easy

Easy Mode

Shorter run, fewer fryer stops, the chicken clears through more often. Good for figuring out the timing before you commit real stakes to Hardcore decisions.

Normal

Normal Mode

The baseline. More stations than Easy, the multiplier ceiling goes higher, risk sits somewhere in between. Most players land here after their first few sessions.

Hardcore

Hardcore Mode

Long run, high ceiling, high crash rate at each station. This one punishes impatience. If you don't have a clear cashout point in mind before the round starts, Hardcore will remind you why that matters.

BetOnGames hasn't published exact probabilities per mode. We're describing the general risk profile — specific station counts and per-mode RTP aren't confirmed in any public source as of May 2026.

Chicken Kitchen vs Chicken Road, Chicken Crash, and Aviator

Four games. Same general "crash" category. Very different actual mechanics.

Chicken Kitchen Chicken Road (InOut) Chicken Crash (Astriona) Aviator (Spribe)
Mechanic Step-crash (fryer stations) Step-crash (road crossing) CrossyRun / step-crossing Continuum crash
Setting Kitchen / fryer Road / highway Urban crossing Plane flight
Max win x10,000 ~x133 equivalent x67,065 Uncapped
Difficulty modes Easy / Normal / Hardcore No No No
Provably fair Yes Data not available Data not available Yes
RTP Not verified 98% 98% ~97%

Data sources: SlotCatalog, Casino Guru (accessed May 2026). Chicken Kitchen RTP gap is intentional — that number hasn't been published.

Inside the Kitchen

Gameplay screenshots will appear here when publicly available.

The kitchen fryer setting features a row of red fryer stations, a cartoon chicken character, and gold multiplier coins above each station.

A public demo version of Chicken Kitchen is not currently available. When the game is integrated by your operator, demo access may become available through their platform.

RTP and Fairness — What We Know

RTP for Chicken Kitchen hasn't been officially published. GamblingTalk ran 5% on launch day — that's a typo. No crash game ships with a 5% return. Whatever the real number is, it's not that.

BetOnGames has published RTP on other titles in their crash portfolio: Zombie Rush sits at 97.5% (EEGaming), Aerobet at 97% (Groove press release). We don't take those numbers and stamp them on Chicken Kitchen — the games are separate products. But if you're trying to frame it in context: the provably fair mechanic is real, and the provider doesn't have a track record of publishing misleadingly low RTPs.

What we can say:

  • Chicken Kitchen is provably fair. Every result can be independently verified after the round.
  • RTP will be listed here once BetOnGames or a major catalog (SlotCatalog, Casino Guru) publishes an official figure. We check regularly.
Provably fair explained: Before each round begins, a seed is set. After the round, you can use that seed to reconstruct the result independently. This means neither the game provider nor the casino can change the outcome retroactively.

About BetOnGames and Betcore

BetOnGames is the instant-games vertical of Betcore, a B2B iGaming platform provider. Betcore is based in Warsaw, Poland, and holds a license from the Curaçao Gaming Control Board.

Their 2026 crash game output so far:

  • Planet Crash — released April 9, 2026
  • Zombie Rush — released April 24, 2026
  • Chicken Kitchen — released May 13, 2026

All three were covered at launch in trade press (GamblingTalk, EEGaming, European Gaming). Betcore distributes through a standard casino API, making Chicken Kitchen available for integration across licensed casino operators globally.

What we don't know: Which specific B2C casinos have integrated Chicken Kitchen in any of the target markets. That information hasn't been made public. When it is, this section will be updated.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find Chicken Kitchen

Chicken Kitchen is currently being integrated by casino operators. No specific operator availability has been publicly confirmed as of this publication.

Find at your preferred crash-friendly operator

Check with licensed casino operators in your region for availability. Integration details will be updated here as they become public.

In the US, online gambling regulations vary by state — check that any operator you use is licensed in your jurisdiction.