Crypto Plinko takes the pegboard everyone knows and turns it into a fast betting game. Drop a puck from the top, watch it bounce down through the pins, and collect whatever multiplier sits in the slot it lands in. The big payouts hug the far edges; the safe ones cluster in the middle.
Each drop is settled on-chain, so the path the puck takes is decided by randomness you can verify after the fact.
You set a risk level and the number of peg rows. Higher risk pushes the jackpot multipliers way up at the edges while gutting the middle, so most pucks land for less than your stake. Lower risk flattens the board into frequent near-break-even results. More rows means more bounces and more extreme edges.
Plinko follows a bell curve: the centre slots come up far more often than the edges, which is exactly why those edge multipliers can be so large. Chasing a 1000x corner is a real long shot. Treat the high-risk board as a lottery and the low-risk board as a slow grind.
Yes. The puck path is determined by on-chain randomness recorded in the bet transaction, so you can confirm the result was not steered toward the low-paying slots.
Raise the risk level and add peg rows. Both push the edge multipliers higher, at the cost of landing in the paying slots far less often.