Free demo · Aim training · Skill-based crash
Chicken Shoot Demo: Train Multiplier Recognition Before You Burn Real Money on ×1.05 Chickens
Unlike Aviator (no skill component), Chicken Shoot rewards genuine reflex skill — recognising multipliers fast and showing the discipline NOT to fire at low values. Demo is where you train it. 1,000 virtual chips, 100 rounds of practice, zero cost.
Crash games researcher · CrashAudit · May 03, 2026
Free demo · No deposit
Play Chicken Shoot demo at Duel.com
Free demo with no signup or deposit — same mechanic as real-money mode so you can test before you stake.
Five steps to use the demo efficiently
- 1
Open an operator carrying Chicken Shoot
Duel.com carries the demo without registration. The Chicken Shoot demo runs inside the operator lobby — InOut Games does not host a public demo URL itself. Look for "Instant Games" or "Crash Games" — Chicken Shoot is not in the slots tab.
- 2
Configure the virtual stake
Demo balance is 1,000 chips. Set 1 chip per round initially — you need volume to train multiplier recognition, and a high stake burns the chip pool too fast. The chips are virtual but the cadence is the same as real money, so build the right habits early.
- 3
Train multiplier recognition
Each chicken flies across the screen with a visible multiplier above it (×1.01 to ×48). Train identifying ×10+ quickly — the discipline to ignore low values is the skill that separates good Chicken Shoot players from the rest. If you fire at every chicken, your expected return collapses to the 94% RTP floor.
- 4
Practice the discipline of NOT firing
In about 70% of rounds, no chicken carries a high enough multiplier. The discipline of skipping the round (forfeiting the stake) is just as important as the discipline of firing. Train this in demo until it is reflex — fighting the urge to fire is the actual learnable skill here.
- 5
Run 100+ rounds before any real-money play
Chicken Shoot has a real skill component. Visual recognition takes time. 100 demo rounds is roughly 10–15 minutes and tells you whether the format clicks for you. Training in demo is much cheaper than burning $50 of real money in your first 30 unprepared rounds.
What demo will not teach you
Demo teaches mechanics and recognition. It does not teach the psychological discipline of "do not fire at ×1.5 chickens when you are down $30 and want to claw back". That discipline only develops with real-money exposure — and it is expensive in the first 50 rounds. Duel.com livestreamers describe this as the "second wall" of Chicken Shoot, the one demo cannot prepare you for.
Chicken Shoot's RTP 94% is the lowest among InOut crash games. House edge is 6%. Training in demo brings you to the theoretical RTP, not above it. There is no strategy that beats the house edge — there are only strategies that prevent it from being made worse by emotional decisions.