14.07.2026 · 3 min read
A Crash Game Studio From Georgia Just Put a Funeral on the SiGMA Brazil Agenda. The Crash Gambling Industry Is the Guest of Honor.

On April 7, before the first panel begins and before the first badge is scanned at the Transamerica Expo Center in São Paulo, attendees at SiGMA Brazil will walk past a tombstone.
It reads: RIP Slow.
It is not a coincidence. It is not a guerrilla stunt. The Funeral Party for Slow Crash Games is officially listed on the SiGMA Brazil event agenda (13:00 to 18:00 )hosted by Lambda Gaming, the studio behind Avion Supersonic, the crash gambling game that was just named Most Played Game 2026 at the SiGMA Africa Awards and shortlisted for Best Crash Game of the Year at the BiS SiGMA South America Awards.
The funeral has a point.
Crash Gambling Has Not Meaningfully Changed in a Decade
The format has a clear history. Bustabit introduced the mechanic in the mid-2010s, a shared multiplier graph, a collective hold-or-cash dynamic that nobody had built before. Aviator took that concept and scaled it across thousands of platforms and millions of players worldwide. The format became a category. The category became a standard.
And then it stopped moving.
For nearly a decade, the core architecture of crash gambling remained unchanged. Every title in the market followed the same rhythm: a round runs, the multiplier climbs, the game crashes, and then players wait. That waiting, the idle time between cycles, was never removed. It was accepted as part of the format.
Meanwhile, the players changed. Attention spans compressed. Mobile became the primary screen. A generation shaped by short-form video and instant content began walking into crash games that still ran on 2016 mechanics. Session lengths declined. Engagement softened. The format had quietly stopped fitting the market it was built for.
Nobody fixed it at the engine level. Until Lambda Gaming did.
The Supersonic Engine™ — Built From the Architecture Up
Lambda Gaming, the Tbilisi-based studio, rebuilt crash gambling from its mathematical foundation. Not the interface. Not the visual design. The actual architecture of how rounds are generated, sequenced, and delivered.
The result is the Supersonic Engine™, a proprietary, Provably Fair, Certified RNG that runs five times more rounds per minute than the current market standard, with zero stability loss, stable under traffic spikes, and reliable on weak mobile connections.
The game built on it is Avion Supersonic. Supersonic Glass UI. Ultra-light 4MB build. Mobile-first. No idle time. No dead seconds between rounds. Continuous play, by design.
If Bustabit was crash gambling 1.0 and Aviator was 2.0, Avion Supersonic is 3.0, the version built for the speed of the world players actually live in today.
The Numbers Operators Are Reporting
Platforms that have deployed Avion Supersonic are reporting:
+225% more bets per session
+310% higher daily bet volume
Up to +600% more round cycles
65+ rounds per session on average
Without new traffic. Without additional promotional spend. Without changing anything on the operator side, except the game.
São Paulo: Three Days, One Live Benchmark
At Booth H165, Transamerica Expo Center, Lambda Gaming will run live demos of Avion Supersonic
across all three days of SiGMA Brazil. Operators are invited to a direct, live comparison of Avion Supersonic against whatever crash gambling title they are currently operating.
The Funeral Party for Slow Games runs on the official agenda from 13:00 to 18:00. A traditional Georgian Tamada toastmaster will lead proceedings. Supersonic Chacha - the Georgian grape spirit that has become a fixture at Lambda Gaming's event activations - will be served at the AVION Open Bar.
"The internet has been supersonic for years. Players now expect instant action and zero dead time. We didn't update Crash Gaming. We killed slow and rebuilt it for the world players already live in." - David Nardaia, CEO, Lambda Gaming
Lambda Gaming arrives in São Paulo, shortlisted for Best Gaming Experience 2026, Best International Market Debut in Brazil 2026, and Best Crash Game of the Year at the BiS SiGMA South America Awards.





