Sikkim Game Chicken Road 2
Chicken Road 2: cross lanes, grow the multiplier, cash out in time
Pick a difficulty, cross lanes one at a time, and cash out before the chicken fails one. Real RTP: 97.03%.
Format
How one round works
You choose a difficulty level before the round starts, then a chicken moves forward one lane at a time. Every lane crossed successfully bumps the multiplier up a step. You can cash out after any successful lane to bank the current multiplier against your stake — or push forward for a bigger one. If the chicken fails a lane, the round ends immediately and the stake is lost, with no partial refund.
Difficulty vs. risk
Four typical difficulty levels
Easy
Smaller multiplier steps per lane, but a much lower chance of failing any single lane.
Medium
A balance point — moderate step size with moderate lane-failure risk.
Hard
Bigger multiplier jumps per lane, paired with a noticeably higher chance of failing early.
Extreme
The largest per-lane multiplier growth, and the highest chance the chicken fails within the first few lanes.
Exact step sizes and failure odds are set by the platform and shown live in-app — treat this as a typical structure for this game format, not an exact quote.
The numbers
What 97.03% RTP means here
Averaged across a large number of rounds and difficulty picks, about 97.03% of money wagered on Chicken Road 2 is returned to players collectively. It does not predict any single round, and it does not change based on which difficulty you personally choose.
Play responsibly
Decide your stopping point before you start
Higher difficulty settings fail more often, early — chasing a big multiplier on Extreme after a loss is exactly how a budget disappears fast. Pick a difficulty and a cash-out target before you start, and treat every round as independent of the last.
Responsible Gaming GuideFAQs
Chicken Road 2 questions, answered
How does a Chicken Road 2 round work?
You pick a difficulty level before starting, then a chicken moves forward one lane at a time. Every lane crossed successfully bumps the multiplier up. You can cash out after any successful lane — but if the chicken fails a lane, the round ends and the stake is lost.
What difficulty level should I pick?
Higher difficulty (Hard, Extreme) grows the multiplier faster per lane but fails far more often, early. Lower difficulty (Easy, Medium) grows slower but survives more lanes on average. Neither is "better" mathematically — they trade speed for survival odds.
What does the 97.03% RTP mean here?
Averaged across a large number of rounds and all difficulty levels, about 97.03% of money wagered on Chicken Road 2 is returned to players collectively. It does not predict any single round or difficulty pick.
Is there a way to know which lane will fail?
No. Each lane's outcome is generated independently by the platform's system at the difficulty you selected — there is no pattern to read or predict from previous rounds or other players' results.
How is this different from Aviator?
Aviator uses one continuously climbing multiplier that can crash at any instant. Chicken Road 2 breaks that same idea into discrete steps (lanes), with a difficulty setting that controls the risk/reward per step. See our Aviator guide for that side of it.
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