Optimal auto-cashout values depend on the difficulty level. Here's the guide.
Auto-cashout removes emotion from the decision. Set it before the round and don't touch it. The right value depends on the difficulty you choose. Wrong settings waste your bankroll — too low and you leave money on the table; too high and you crash before cashing. This guide gives optimal ranges for each mode.
| Mode | Suggested Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Easy | 2.0x – 2.5x | High hit rate, steady profits |
| Medium | 4x – 6x | Balance of risk and reward |
| Hard | 8x – 15x | Early crashes common; need higher target |
| Hardcore | 50x – 200x | Long losing streaks; hunt big wins |
Easy mode reaches 2x–2.5x frequently. Setting 2.0x means you'll hit often with small wins. Pushing to 3x or 4x on Easy reduces hit rate without much upside — the mode isn't built for big multipliers. Medium: 4x–6x matches the mode's balance. Hard: early crashes are common, so 8x–15x is realistic when it runs. Hardcore: 50x–200x — most rounds crash before that, but when it runs, you want to be in the game.
"Wrong setting = wasted bankroll. 2x on Hardcore or 100x on Easy — both are mistakes."
— Auto-cashout tip
Setting 2x on Hardcore wastes the mode — you'll hit often but with tiny wins while taking Hardcore's variance. Setting 100x on Easy is pointless — you'll almost never hit. Match the setting to the mode. And never override auto-cashout mid-round. "One more second" is how losses happen.
Explore more: How do I set auto-cashout for maximum profit? | Chicken Road when to cash out | Chicken Road difficulty levels