What is the NZT brain?
The NZT Brain is an advanced decision-making engine built on three key components:
- Hand History – a massive database of real played hands
- Neural Network – the core AI that analyzes, adapts, and predicts
- Experts – professional players who train and tune the system
NZT doesn’t just follow theory — it learns from real experience, adapts to opponents, and finds profitable exploitative plays invisible to the human eye. That’s what gives it an edge beyond GTO.
At its core, NZT uses a proprietary Black Box architecture — a closed system of logic and algorithms that processes 255+ parameters per hand to deliver the strongest possible hint. This approach is kept confidential to maintain security and prevent replication.
The more hands it sees, the smarter it gets.
That’s why NZT thrives at scale — across tables, stakes, and player pools.
How the NZT makes decisions:
NZT makes decisions using a multi-layered neural network trained on over 400,000,000 real hands. The brain receives:
Input:
- Hand History
- Opponent Profiles (255+ stats including VPIP, PFR, aggression factors, etc.)
Using this, NZT calculates the probability of each opponent’s future actions, adjusting to each situation in real time.
How it works:
• For every action, the AI evaluates player tendencies + current line of play
• It uses a branching logic tree to simulate various outcomes and pick the one with highest EV
• If any other NZT has already played against this opponent — your bot uses that experience too
• Even strong hands may be folded if the AI detects high risk based on history and blockers
Ongoing development:
• Constant training with live data — outdated hands are replaced with new ones
• 12,000 hours/month are spent by our team of poker pros and engineers
• NZT evolves faster than any human thanks to self-learning mechanisms
Result: when your bot sits at a table, chances are it already “knows” the players — and exploits them from hand one.
Why are you telling everyone about NZT instead of using it by yourself?
We play ourselves too — we even have a dedicated department focused on farming. But NZT’s goal goes far beyond personal profit.
Our priority is scale and information. When NZT is used across the globe, in different rooms and clubs, we gain access to unique data on players, playstyles, and entire ecosystems. This not only strengthens the neural network itself but also creates a competitive advantage that money can’t buy.
Each client is essentially a scout. They discover new platforms, bring in fresh stats, and expand NZT’s presence. This helps us build a network, not just win games ourselves.
We’re not focused on a single game — we’re building a large-scale infrastructure using the most effective levers of influence. That’s why selling access to NZT isn’t “giving up profit,” it’s multiplying it — through scale, data, and control over the market.
Does NZT use a GTO strategy?
NZT doesn’t just play GTO — it goes beyond it.
GTO (Game Theory Optimal) is a strong foundation. But it assumes opponents play perfectly — which they rarely do. That’s why NZT combines GTO fundamentals with exploitative logic that adapts in real time.
It adjusts based on opponent behavior:
• Plays loose versus tight players,
• Tightens up versus aggressive players,
• Calls more when opponents bluff too much,
• Traps when they underbluff.
This hybrid strategy allows NZT to maximize profit in each specific hand, not just remain balanced. That’s how it achieves winrates far beyond any pure GTO bot.
I've played several hours and lost everything! Why is it so?
Poker is a game with short-term variance and long-term expectation. Even the strongest player in the world can lose several sessions in a row because, in the short run, not only skill but also luck plays a role.
That’s exactly why we created NZT — so you can play using the best possible decisions in every situation. It doesn’t guarantee a win in 2 hours, but it gives a serious mathematical edge over time, as well as access to a huge dataset of hand histories, opponent behavior, and playing patterns.
Imagine a bet in a casino with a 60% chance of winning. You might lose 3 times in a row, but after 1,000 bets, you’ll be in profit. The same logic applies to our assistant: it doesn’t eliminate luck or variance, but it systematically moves you toward profit.
If you’d like, we can prepare a calculation for you — showing how much you could earn by playing 100,000 hands strictly following NZT’s recommendations. This data is especially useful if you’re considering building a bot farm or scaling up.
Can I always win using NZT?
No poker strategy can guarantee wins in every session — but NZT is designed to maximize your profit over time.
The key is to win more than you lose, and NZT gives you the edge to do exactly that.
To get the best results:
- Target weak players — NZT extracts the most value from them.
- Use our guides to identify profitable tables quickly.
- Play 100–200bb stacks when there’s no straddle, or 200–400bb with straddle — NZT is optimized for these depths.
The Select Helper system will help you find the most +EV game in each situation.
What if I deviate from hint?
Every time you deviate from the hint, your EV (expected value) will drop. The AI recalculates the situation based on your new action and still gives you the best next move — but from a worse position.
Even if you’re a pro, situations where manual deviation gives higher EV are extremely rare and marginal in impact over a long sample.
Conclusion:
To maximize profit, we strongly recommend following the hints — they’re calculated to give the best EV in the long run.
Why robot folds strong hands?
NZT evaluates hundreds of factors in real time — not just your cards.
It considers:
- Opponent stats and past hand history
- Betting dynamics and bluff frequencies
- Blockers and outs across all visible hands (including from other NZTs at the table)
Sometimes folding a strong hand is the most profitable move when:
- The opponent’s range is extremely narrow and value-heavy
- You block your own outs
- There are no reasonable bluffs in their line
That’s why we recommend playing with 2–3 NZT accounts at one table.
They exchange information passively, giving the system better reads — while your personal winrate stays stable, the table winrate grows.
Do the bots know that there are other bots at the table? Do they recognize each other?
Yes, NZT bots can detect the presence of other NZTs at the table — but they don’t collude or cooperate.
They treat each other as regular opponents with advanced stats. The system continues calculating optimal plays independently for each account, based on in-hand dynamics and standard exploitative logic.
Why it’s important:
Because there is no team play or shared strategy between bots, it reduces detection risk and ensures that every NZT plays for its own EV, not for the group.
Does the AI see the cards of other NZT at the table?
Yes — but only to calculate equity more precisely.
NZT sees the folded hands of other NZT accounts at the table. This allows the system to account for card removal effects (blockers) and adjust your action accordingly.
For example:
If you hold AK and face a 3-bet, this is often an all-in.
But if other NZT players folded A or K, your equity drops — and NZT might recommend calling instead of shoving, or even folding in rare cases.
The result: more accurate decisions, especially in borderline spots.
Some of your bots are weak and some of them are strong. Is that true?
No — all clients get the same version of the bot.
There are no “premium” or “weaker” models. Every NZT runs the latest, most advanced AI engine with the same strategic core.
What actually changes the result:
• Skill in table selection
• Volume of hands
• Understanding how to use the bot effectively
If you’re not seeing strong results, talk to your manager. We’ll help you find more profitable fields — that’s where NZT shows its full power.
Can you change VPIP\PFR and other stats of a bot?
Directly — no. But stats change dynamically depending on the table.
NZT adapts its behavior in real time:
• Against loose bluffers — it tightens up
• Against nits — it bluffs more boldly
• Against stations — it value bets more aggressively
If you manually deviate from hints, your stats may also shift — but we don’t recommend this, since it reduces EV.
Let NZT do the work — it’s already optimized for the current lineup at your table.
Which tables should I choose?
We recommend 6-max or 9-max tables — they give the highest winrate with NZT.
NZT can play Heads-Up (HU), but we don’t recommend it unless you’re very experienced.
Why?
- In HU, almost everyone has high VPIP — even regs look like fish.
- It’s harder to read opponents and find value.
- HU games often involve strong players fighting for the same weak spot.
Bottom line:
For consistent profit — play 6-max or 9-max, find weak players, and let NZT do the rest.