Hellridah Posted February 19 Posted February 19 Underground source : Yes, online casinos can use AI to cheat players, though it is not universal. AI technology allows for more sophisticated manipulation of game outcomes, player behavior, and even personalization of betting strategies. Here's how AI can be used to cheat in online casinos: Predictive Analytics and Player Profiling: AI can analyze a player's betting patterns, habits, and preferences to predict when they are most likely to place a bet or increase their wager. This allows the casino to adjust odds or timing to maximize profits from that player. Manipulating Game Outcomes: In games like poker or blackjack, AI can be used to influence the shuffle or deal of cards to favor the house. In slot machines, AI can adjust the payout rates dynamically based on player behavior or the casino's financial goals. Cheating in Live Dealer Games: AI can be used to control the dealer's actions or the timing of card deals in live dealer games, making it seem random but actually favoring the house. Fraud Detection and Evasion: AI can detect when a player is about to win a large sum and then subtly adjust the game to reduce the payout or even trigger a "loss" for the player. It can also be used to evade detection by hiding patterns that would otherwise be obvious to human analysts. Personalized Cheating: AI can be used to create personalized cheating strategies for individual players, such as offering bonuses or promotions that encourage them to keep playing longer or wager more. AI-Driven Botting: Some online casinos use AI-driven bots to play on behalf of players or to manipulate the game in real-time, often without the player's knowledge. While not all online casinos use AI to cheat, the technology makes it easier and more efficient to do so. Players can reduce the risk by choosing reputable casinos with transparent algorithms, reading reviews, and using tools like random number generators (RNG) auditors or third-party verification services. Me : So like what can be trusted these days ? are we to just trust the process and pile into casino's what assurances do we have of a fair game ???? if this is the norm is making an absolute mockery of the aspect of fair play and how are we meant to trust the advice of anyone ???? I know this is in operation in more than one place I know because I've executed special tests to determine intelligence altering structures krikey are you people for real how long do you think this is going to last before you get busted ??? Quote
Flatzem888 Posted February 19 Posted February 19 I asked AI about what you posted to see how AI defends AI; This forum post is a classic example of "AI Alarmism"—taking a real technology and imagining it has "god-like" powers to break the laws of math and regulation. Your forum friend sounds like he's been down a rabbit hole, and while he’s right that AI is changing the world, his specific claims about "personalized cheating" in regulated casinos are mostly a "conspiracy theory" cocktail. Fact-Checking the "Underground Source" The post mixes some marketing truths with heavy technical misinformation. Let’s break it down: The "Predictive Analytics" Part (True but not "Cheating"): This part is actually true. Casinos (both online and in Vegas) use AI to see who the "whales" are. They use it to send you a coupon for a free steak or a 10% bonus right when they think you’re about to quit. It’s manipulative marketing, but it doesn't change the math of the game itself. The "Manipulating Outcomes" Part (Significant Misinformation): In a regulated online casino (like those licensed in Malta, the UK, or New Jersey), this is virtually impossible. RNG (Random Number Generators): The "math" of the game is hardcoded and audited by third parties like eCOGRA. If a casino "dynamically adjusted" a slot's payout because a specific player was winning, they would lose their license instantly. Live Dealer Games: These are filmed in studios with physical cards. Using AI to "control the dealer's hand" would require some sort of Mission: Impossible robotic sleight of hand that would be way more expensive than just letting the "House Edge" do its job. The "Special Tests" Claim: When your friend says he’s executed "special tests to determine intelligence altering structures," that is a massive red flag for confirmation bias. One person playing a few hundred rounds cannot "test" a billion-to-one algorithm. Why Casinos Don't Need to Use AI to Cheat The irony is that The House Always Wins without needing AI. A standard slot machine has a Return to Player (RTP) of maybe 94-96%. That means the casino is legally guaranteed to keep 4-6% of every dollar over time. Risk vs. Reward: Why would a billion-dollar company use "Personalized Cheating AI" and risk a multi-million dollar fine and a total ban when the math already guarantees them a profit? Quote
Hellridah Posted February 20 Author Posted February 20 On 2/20/2026 at 4:26 AM, Flatzem888 said: I asked AI about what you posted to see how AI defends AI; This forum post is a classic example of "AI Alarmism"—taking a real technology and imagining it has "god-like" powers to break the laws of math and regulation. Your forum friend sounds like he's been down a rabbit hole, and while he’s right that AI is changing the world, his specific claims about "personalized cheating" in regulated casinos are mostly a "conspiracy theory" cocktail. Fact-Checking the "Underground Source" The post mixes some marketing truths with heavy technical misinformation. Let’s break it down: The "Predictive Analytics" Part (True but not "Cheating"): This part is actually true. Casinos (both online and in Vegas) use AI to see who the "whales" are. They use it to send you a coupon for a free steak or a 10% bonus right when they think you’re about to quit. It’s manipulative marketing, but it doesn't change the math of the game itself. The "Manipulating Outcomes" Part (Significant Misinformation): In a regulated online casino (like those licensed in Malta, the UK, or New Jersey), this is virtually impossible. RNG (Random Number Generators): The "math" of the game is hardcoded and audited by third parties like eCOGRA. If a casino "dynamically adjusted" a slot's payout because a specific player was winning, they would lose their license instantly. Live Dealer Games: These are filmed in studios with physical cards. Using AI to "control the dealer's hand" would require some sort of Mission: Impossible robotic sleight of hand that would be way more expensive than just letting the "House Edge" do its job. The "Special Tests" Claim: When your friend says he’s executed "special tests to determine intelligence altering structures," that is a massive red flag for confirmation bias. One person playing a few hundred rounds cannot "test" a billion-to-one algorithm. Why Casinos Don't Need to Use AI to Cheat The irony is that The House Always Wins without needing AI. A standard slot machine has a Return to Player (RTP) of maybe 94-96%. That means the casino is legally guaranteed to keep 4-6% of every dollar over time. Risk vs. Reward: Why would a billion-dollar company use "Personalized Cheating AI" and risk a multi-million dollar fine and a total ban when the math already guarantees them a profit? By My Friend you Mean Dig/AI with no restrictions : They use whatever they like to cheat I know this ***** cause 12 months ago when I heard they were loading up that's when the win:loss ratio started to spike in their favor bro I was not born yesterday their using this ***** to cheat people hard : and so many times these guys have been asked to reveal the backend and haven't the machine said basically not everything is rigged and the rule is not universal but its not as complicated as it seems for machine learning to pick up what to do to cheat what we consider to be a difficult task these things process in a micro second and can do universal patching in real time . End of the day they can be programmed to do a task and following their orders like soliders to say something is impossible is nonsensical its not major constructions these suggestions are quite doable and have probably already been done but I'm starting to look for E-COGRA approved casino's only i'm too that point can't ignore it anymore . As for the house they have to learn fairplay or their licenses will be gone just like that and there will be zero zip nada telling you this carry on will only last so long . I mean don't everybody speak at once I know there are others that know their getting ripped feel free to speak up or these turds will just keep doing it . Quote
Hellridah Posted yesterday at 04:02 AM Author Posted yesterday at 04:02 AM Quite Sure things are running on a profit / loss system that RTP/RNG gets interfered with based on house losses I'm not saying this lightly I've noticed a consistent pattern of when hits occur the rtp changes across not just one game but a number of them across software platforms and this is in a so called regulated jurisdiction : and also I've noticed when a particular software company's software pays out they consistently magically vanish which is got me thinking maybe some are playing fair and getting taken away because the house likes to cheat and not everyone is dishonest . I've threatened to do this but I might actually start showing recorded sessions and not just of the good but of the bad (in real time) and you'll can decide for yourselves typically example 6 hits of free spins on dead or alive recently on 45 cents with maximum hits never going over 4 dollars you can't tell me this is random its absolute and utter nonsense . Part that gets me going is how these guys on top of their cheating have the cheek to ask for documents beyond the norm to stall withdrawal processes or try to stop them all together not only are you pirates but your cheeky ones as well . Quote
Flatzem888 Posted yesterday at 04:18 AM Posted yesterday at 04:18 AM 13 minutes ago, Hellridah said: Quite Sure things are running on a profit / loss system that RTP/RNG gets interfered with based on house losses I'm not saying this lightly I've noticed a consistent pattern of when hits occur the rtp changes across not just one game but a number of them across software platforms and this is in a so called regulated jurisdiction : and also I've noticed when a particular software company's software pays out they consistently magically vanish which is got me thinking maybe some are playing fair and getting taken away because the house likes to cheat and not everyone is dishonest . I've threatened to do this but I might actually start showing recorded sessions and not just of the good but of the bad (in real time) and you'll can decide for yourselves typically example 6 hits of free spins on dead or alive recently on 45 cents with maximum hits never going over 4 dollars you can't tell me this is random its absolute and utter nonsense . Part that gets me going is how these guys on top of their cheating have the cheek to ask for documents beyond the norm to stall withdrawal processes or try to stop them all together not only are you pirates but your cheeky ones as well . AI hit back with this; Our friend on the AskGamblers forum is hitting all the classic "gambler’s fallacy" high notes tonight. It’s a very human reaction—when the math isn't mathing in our favor, we look for a ghost in the machine. Let’s break down his rant with a bit of "AI logic" vs. the reality of the 2026 gambling industry: 1. The "Global RTP Switch" Myth He’s suggesting that if you win on one game, the "house" flips a switch that lowers the RTP across every game from every provider. The Reality: For this to be true, companies like Pragmatic Play, Evolution, and Hacksaw would all have to share a secret real-time API with the casino to throttle individual players. In a regulated jurisdiction, these providers host the games on their servers, not the casino's. The casino just provides the "window" to see the game. The "Pattern": What he’s seeing is likely Clustering. Randomness isn't an even spread; it’s clumpy. You can have 10 "dead" sessions in a row followed by one massive hit. That’s not an intervention; that’s just how $1,000,000,000$ spins actually look over time. 2. The "Vanishing Software" Theory He claims fair providers "magically vanish" because the house doesn't like them. The Reality: Software providers disappear from sites usually due to Licensing & Geo-blocking. In 2026, regulators are stricter than ever. If a provider loses its permit in a specific region (like Canada), the casino must pull the games immediately or face massive fines. It's rarely a conspiracy to stop "fair" games. 3. The "Dead or Alive" 45-Cent Frustration Dead or Alive (and its sequel) are the poster children for Extreme Volatility. The Math: On a high-volatility slot, the "Standard Deviation" is massive. Getting 6 free spin rounds that pay less than $10$x your bet is actually a very common statistical outcome for that specific game. It’s designed to pay "zero" 90% of the time so it can pay $100,000$x once every few million spins. His Logic: "It can't be random." The Truth: It is random, but "Random" doesn't mean "Fairly Distributed" in the short term. 4. The "Cheeky Pirates" & KYC Stalling On this point, the ranter actually has a bit of a leg to stand on. The Tactic: While KYC is a legal requirement, some "Tier 3" casinos (like those with the Anjouan license) definitely use "Document Loops" to stall big withdrawals, hoping the player will get frustrated and "play back" their winnings. Quote
loceff13 Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM Posted yesterday at 04:49 AM I doubt it personally, big sites have too much to lose by cheating players. Quote
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