Crazy Time feels intimidating the first time you load it, there's a live host, multiple wheels, bonus rounds, and multipliers all competing for your attention. But the core gameplay is simpler than it looks, and once you understand the betting flow, the entertainment experience becomes clear. Direct answer: To play Crazy Time, you select a stake (EUR 0.10 to EUR 50), click spin, the base game reels turn, and you win or trigger a bonus. If a bonus activates, Evolution's live host manages the wheel spin and multiplier rounds while you watch. Payouts depend on RNG outcomes, not your decisions after the spin. First thing: pick your stake. This is the only real decision you make in the game. Crazy Time offers bet ranges from EUR 0.10 (micro-stakes for bankroll stretching) to EUR 50 (high-action players). A EUR 100 session budget tells a completely different story at EUR 0.10 per spin (1,000 spins possible) versus EUR 5 per spin (20 spins maximum). Neither is wrong, it depends on whether you want longevity or intensity. New players often ask: should I start at EUR 0.50 and adjust based on wins or losses? The honest answer is that adjusting stakes during a session doesn't change the underlying RTP or volatility, it only changes how quickly you burn through your bankroll if luck turns. If you're comfortable EUR 0.50 per spin, stay at EUR 0.50. If you want to stretch EUR 100 to 200 spins, drop to EUR 0.50. But don't increase to EUR 2 after landing a EUR 30 win thinking you've found a hot streak. Variance doesn't work that way. Once you've selected your stake, click the spin button (or let it auto-spin if you're feeling passive). The base reels spin, and one of three outcomes happens: you lose the spin, you win cash on the base game, or you trigger a bonus feature. The cash wins on base are straightforward, you collect the amount displayed and move to the next spin. Bonus triggers require the live host's involvement. When a bonus activates, the broadcast switches focus to Evolution's host and the relevant wheel. If it's Cash Game, the host spins a wheel with prize segments and lands on one. Your payout is whatever that segment displays, EUR 10, EUR 25, EUR 50, or whatever the wheel includes that day. For Coin Flip, the host flips a coin repeatedly, and each successful flip doubles your win until a losing flip ends the bonus. Camel Cash uses a picking mechanic. Crazy Time (the marquee feature) combines wheel spins with potential multiplier stacking. Here's the critical detail many new players miss: you don't influence the outcome of any bonus. You can't predict which segment lands, flip a coin differently, or pick a better Camel Cash square. The result is predetermined by Evolution's RNG before the visual animation even plays. The broadcast is entertainment, not skill. Watching the live host doesn't affect your odds. What about betting systems? Should you increase your stake after losses to "recover" faster, or decrease after wins to "lock in" profit? Neither strategy changes the underlying math. With a 96% RTP, your long-term expectation is always a 4% loss on total wagered amount. A EUR 100 session at EUR 1 per spin (100 total wagered) expects to return roughly EUR 96. Betting higher after losses just burns through your starting balance quicker when luck's running cold. Automatic spin is worth discussing. Many players prefer the hands-off approach, setting 20-50 auto-spins and watching the results accumulate. This removes the illusion that timing your click affects outcomes (it doesn't) and lets you enjoy the broadcast without the repetitive clicking. Session pacing is smoother, and you're less likely to chase losses in real-time when each spin happens automatically. How long should a session last? That depends on your stake and budget. A EUR 100 session at EUR 0.50 per spin gives you roughly 200 spins of gameplay, which typically runs 15-25 minutes depending on how long bonus rounds take to resolve. If you're playing EUR 5 per spin, expect 20 spins and 10-15 minutes of action. Set that time expectation before you start, it helps you avoid "just one more spin" loops. Bankroll management is the real skill. Divide your session budget into units. A EUR 100 session could be four EUR 25 chunks. Play the first EUR 25, stop, take a break, and decide whether to continue. This prevents the emotional spiral of chasing losses and forces a moment of clarity between chunks. If you've lost EUR 25 and feel compelled to instantly burn EUR 25 more, you're in a reactive headspace, and reactive play almost always ends worse than stepping back. Should you chase bonuses? No. Set a stake you're comfortable with, play that stake for your planned session length, and let variance handle bonus frequency. Bonus triggers are random, and "luck feels hot" is the oldest casino narrative. If you've landed three Cash Game bonuses in 60 spins and feel compelled to raise your stake because you're "hot," you're probably chasing the feeling, not playing strategically. Last thing: understand that Crazy Time's appeal isn't primarily about winning money, it's the entertainment value of a live broadcast with real chance elements. If you sit down expecting to profit EUR 30-50 from a EUR 100 session, you'll often be disappointed. If you sit down for 20 minutes of entertainment knowing EUR 4 will probably disappear to the house edge, the experience feels completely different. Set realistic expectations and play within your bankroll, and the session becomes genuine entertainment rather than a financial venture.