Breakdown · scam

'Predictor' apps: why they don't work

'Artificial intelligence will predict the next multiplier' — predictor apps promise. We break it down calmly and to the point: why predicting the outcome is technically impossible, how the illusion of accuracy is created, what such apps actually earn on, and why they're dangerous.

Play, but responsibly!

'Our AI computes the next multiplier — bet for sure.' That's how the promise of predictor apps sounds. It falls apart at one simple question: where will the app get information that doesn't exist anywhere yet? Let's break it down on the merits, without emotion — and at the same time see how this bait works and why it's dangerous.

What predictors promise

The scenario is almost always the same. A pretty app or site shows a 'forecast' of the multiplier for the next round — often with a 'confidence' percentage and charts for credibility. Then it offers to register at the 'right' casino via a link, top up your account, and 'bet on the signal.' This is presented as a technological advantage that you supposedly gain access to.

The problem is that there's nothing to predict here and nothing to predict with. And this isn't an opinion but a consequence of how the round's fairness works.

Why it's technically impossible

As shown in detail in the section on provably fair, the round's multiplier is determined by the secret server seed and locked in before your bet. Until the end of the round only the hash of this seed is published, and the seed itself is revealed only after the break-off. The hash is irreversible — you can't recover the seed from it. Look at the timing of events:

time → seed hash published you bet the multiplier is already locked, but unknown flight crash seed revealed the 'predictor' promises to know here — but this is revealed only here
To predict the multiplier at the moment of the bet, you need the server seed — but it's revealed only after the break-off. The information the 'predictor' promises doesn't publicly exist at the moment of the bet.

The conclusion is unambiguous: at the moment you need to bet, no one but the server has the data for a prediction. An app on your phone isn't connected to the server seed and can't reverse SHA-256. So a 'predictor' doesn't compute the future — it physically can't.

The main thing

You can't compute what hasn't been revealed

Provably fair is built so that the outcome is impossible to know in advance — that's its point and its protection against tweaking. The same wall that stops the casino from cheating also makes any honest 'predictor' impossible.

How the illusion of accuracy is created

If prediction is impossible, why does it seem to come true sometimes? Several tricks work at once:

  • After-the-fact fitting. The 'forecast' is shown or interpreted so that it's easy to match to an outcome that already happened.
  • A wide range. Instead of a precise number, a 'spread' is named, into which some rounds fall by chance.
  • Selective demonstration. Lucky coincidences are shown and saved, misses are quietly removed.
  • Chance under high variance. In noisy data, lucky guesses are inevitable even without any 'model.'
Myth

'The app guessed right several times in a row — so it really knows something.'

Fact

Several coincidences in a row are ordinary chance under high variance. This doesn't prove access to a future that no one has.

What they actually earn on

Since 'accuracy' is an illusion, the question arises: why is all this done then? The answer is simple and monetary. Almost always a 'predictor' requires registering at a specific casino via an affiliate link. Its creator gets a commission for the players brought in and their losses.

That is, the business model has nothing to do with predictions. The product here is you as traffic and your deposit. The 'forecast' is needed only so that you follow the link, top up your account, and start playing. The more you lose, the more the 'predictor' earns — its interests are directly opposed to yours.

You're sold not a prediction but a reason to make a deposit via the right link.

Why such apps are dangerous

Besides the pointless waste of money, predictors are a typical channel for spreading malware, especially when they're offered for download as an APK outside official stores. Under the guise of a 'forecast,' a program can end up on your device that:

  • steals passwords, confirmation codes from SMS, and banking-app data;
  • shows intrusive ads or quietly sets up paid subscriptions;
  • gains access to contacts, files, and notifications.

Caution

Disproportionate risk for a benefit that doesn't exist

You risk money, passwords, and bank access in exchange for a 'forecast' that technically can't exist. If an app requires installing an APK from an unverified source and registering via a link — that's almost always a scheme, not a tool.

Any 'predictor' is a casino's marketing funnel dressed in a technology costume.

The section's conclusion: predicting an honest crash is impossible, and 'predictors' earn on your deposit and your gullibility, additionally risking your data. The next variety of the same deception is paid 'signals' in messengers: how they work we'll break down next.

Frequently asked questions

No. The round's outcome is locked in on the server before your bet and depends on the secret server seed, which is revealed only after the round. An app on your phone has no access to this seed and can't reverse the hash function, so it simply has nowhere to compute the future multiplier from. A 'predictor' doesn't predict — it shows a random number or one fitted after the fact.

In several ways. Sometimes the 'prediction' is shown or interpreted so that it's easy to fit to an outcome that already happened. Sometimes a wide range is given, into which some rounds fall by chance. And selective memory works too: coincidences are noticed and remembered, misses are not. With high variance, lucky guesses are inevitable, but they don't predict anything.

Because that's exactly where the earnings come from. The creator of the 'predictor' gets an affiliate commission for the players they bring in and their losses. The 'prediction' itself is just bait, so that you register via the right link and top up your account. The real product here is you as traffic, not the mythical accuracy of the forecast.

No, and there can't be. The ability to predict the outcome would contradict the very essence of provably fair, on which trust in the game rests. Neither the studio Aviatrix nor casinos release or can release predictors. Anything that calls itself an 'official predictor' uses someone else's brand for deception.

This is a typical channel for spreading malware. Under the guise of a 'predictor,' a program can end up on your device that steals passwords, confirmation codes, and banking-app data, shows intrusive ads, or signs you up for paid services. Plus direct monetary losses from 'via the link' top-ups. The risk is disproportionately high, and the promised benefit doesn't exist.