Why LuckyJetInfo exists
Across much of the internet, most of the material about Lucky Jet and other crash games is casino marketing disguised as informational content. Search results are flooded with "winning strategies", "secret signals", and "independent reviews" backed by casino affiliate programs that earn 25β50% of the losses of the players they refer.
LuckyJetInfo was created as a counterweight to this environment. We explain how Lucky Jet really works, why "winning strategies" don't work mathematically, how the Telegram-signals scam is built, and where to turn for help with a developing gambling addiction.
Who is behind the project
LuckyJetInfo is created by a small team β a few people with backgrounds in IT, information security, and journalism.
We do not publish the authors' personal names and photos. This is done for two reasons. The first: criticizing the industry openly and publicly can create risks for the authors. The second: the content of the material matters more than the team's personal recognition.
If you need to confirm a connection with the project β for journalists, researchers, regulators, or industry colleagues β write to the editorial email (see below). We are happy to communicate through verified channels.
Editorial principles
A few principles we follow when working on our material:
- Facts come from public sources. Every statement relies on available information: developer documentation, regulator reports, academic publications, and reporting from specialist outlets.
- Disclosing uncertainty. When we don't have exact data, we say so directly. We don't invent figures or pass off estimates as facts.
- We give no financial advice. We don't advise how to "play correctly" or "earn better". All our material is educational and does not encourage gambling with real money.
- We correct mistakes. If a factual error is found in an article, we fix it at the first opportunity, with a note of the correction date at the bottom of the page. Quietly rewriting history is not our method.
The sources we rely on
So that you can verify our statements yourself, below are the main categories of sources we use:
Developer documentation
Public technical information from Gaming Corps (the developer of Lucky Jet) and Spribe (the developer of Aviator), available through their corporate sites and press releases. Some technical documentation is published by certification laboratories (GLI, BMM, eCOGRA, iTech Labs) and is publicly available.
Regulators
Publications from licensing authorities: the CuraΓ§ao Gaming Authority (curacao-egaming.com), the Malta Gaming Authority (mga.org.mt), the UK Gambling Commission (gamblingcommission.gov.uk), the Kahnawake Gaming Commission (kahnawake.com), as well as national tax and financial authorities where they regulate the relevant financial transactions.
Academic work
Publications on gambling addiction in peer-reviewed journals: the Journal of Gambling Studies, Addictive Behaviors, International Gambling Studies, and Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, along with national-language research on behavioral addictions. The diagnostic standards are DSM-5 (APA) and ICD-11 (WHO).
Specialist outlets
Industry news and analysis: SBC News, iGaming Business, Gambling Insider, CalvinAyre, and EGR Global, plus general business and tech outlets such as Forbes. Statistics come from Statista, H2 Gambling Capital (selected public reports), and Google Trends.
Open source
Technical breakdowns and open implementations of Provably Fair on GitHub, documentation for cryptographic libraries (Python hashlib, Node.js crypto), and publicly available articles on reverse-engineering crash games. All code examples in our material are educational and tested on sample data.
Feedback
Write to us if you:
- Found a factual error β we'll fix it and note the update date.
- Want to suggest a topic or question β we'll consider it for future material.
- Represent the media or an academic organization β we're happy to communicate through verified channels.
- Want to report a fraudulent channel or resource β we'll add it in an update to the relevant article.
- Noticed technical problems on the site β we'll tell you what we fixed and when.
editor@luckyjetinfo.infohunch.com
We don't reply instantly β usually within 3β5 business days. In your email, state the topic and a link to the specific article if your question relates to it β this speeds up processing considerably.
If your question is urgent β gambling addiction or an acute financial situation β please reach out directly to the support services on the "Responsible gambling" page, not through us. We do not provide psychological help or financial advice β there are free services that do this professionally and around the clock.