Pay once. Own the
poker bot license.
Three one-time tiers — from $750 for NLH to $1,990 for the full stack. No yearly invoices, no per-seat renewals. Burn a day on the trial, decide, pay once, keep it.
No setup calls, no sales tax. License key emailed instantly.
One-time pricing. Three tiers.
Pay once, use the build. Every tier opens with the same 1-day trial — walk away inside the window and you owe nothing.
Starter
NLH onlyNo-Limit Hold'em, single format. Pay once, no renewals.
- ✓ NLH cash + NLH MTT profiles
- ✓ One license, lifetime use
- ✓ Email support (48h)
- ✓ 1-day free trial included
- ✓ Profile updates while supported
Pro
RecommendedNLH plus PLO. The build most operators actually run.
- ✓ NLH + PLO (cash, both formats)
- ✓ Priority support (4h, business)
- ✓ Monthly profile + model refresh
- ✓ 1-day free trial included
- ✓ Pay once, no per-seat invoices
- ✓ Private build channel
Master
Full stackEvery format the engine ships: NLH + PLO + MTT + OFC.
- ✓ NLH + PLO + MTT + OFC
- ✓ All current and future formats
- ✓ Priority support, fastest queue
- ✓ 1-day free trial included
- ✓ White-glove onboarding (1h call)
- ✓ Direct line to the build team
Every tier ships with the 1-day trial. The key converts to the paid one-time license only if you keep using it past the window. Nothing recurring, ever.
What's inside the license
Built for operators who already know what they want. If you need someone to walk you through whether a poker bot is the right call for your room, this isn't your page — but if you've made that call already, this is the page you want.
Working build, not a demo
A current production build of the engine — the same binary running on paying seats today, signed and version-pinned to your license key.
Format profiles, ready
Pre-tuned profiles for cash, MTT, PLO, and heads-up — drop into the table you're targeting and the engine adapts opening ranges and bet sizing automatically.
Sub-five-minute delivery
Pay or claim trial → key in your inbox → download link → running in the time it takes to brew coffee. No "your sales rep will be in touch shortly."
Hardened against detection
Per-seat timing jitter, input humanization, isolated client containers. The same anti-detection stack the vendor uses on its own managed seats.
Updates that ship
Profile refreshes every month on Pro and Master, on the standard cadence for Starter. You see exactly what changed, not a "we made things better" changelog.
Code-side access
Want to wire the engine into your own stack? The GitHub org ships adapters, schemas, and SDKs you can read before you commit.
Try it. Then decide.
Trial covers everything in your chosen tier — same build, same support queue, same profiles. Pay once only if you keep it.
See the engine working
A short walkthrough of the build on a live table — same binary, same key flow you get inside the trial.
Why this price?
A poker bot license isn't priced in a vacuum. Here's what's actually behind the $750–$1,990 range, and what the cheaper options on the market are quietly costing you.
$0 open-source bots are a trap
The GitHub projects you can find for nothing were last updated somewhere between 2018 and 2021. They don't connect to a single modern client. The "cracked" commercial builds floating on forums are, statistically, packaged with trojans, keyloggers, and wallet-credential stealers. The actual cost of free is your seat, your stack, or both.
Cheap profiles, predictable bans
The budget tier is hardcoded decision trees — "if VPIP > 40% and position is button, raise 3x." The strategies are static, vendor-shared across thousands of buyers, and well-mapped by every security team in the industry. Reported ban rates land anywhere from 15% to 100% depending on the room. The license is cheap; the replacement-account treadmill is not.
What the price actually buys
Neural-network decisioning sitting on top of GTO solver databases, with real-time opponent profiling and exploit adjustment. The engine adapts inside a session — softer against fish, tighter against regs. Operators report 10–40 bb/100 winrate ranges across 20+ rooms, with detection risk staying low when the runtime is set up the way the docs say.
The license is the cheap part
Budget around the license, not just for it. A box or VPS if you don't already have one ($0–$200/mo). Residential or mobile proxies for rooms that fingerprint IP ($3–$150/mo; clubby apps usually skip this). Setup runs 10–40 hours the first time, plus 2–5 hours a week of monitoring. And put aside roughly 10–15% of expected profit as ban-replacement reserve — even good engines have some exposure.
Short version: the cheap tier is cheap because it costs you somewhere else. The price here is what an engine costs when nobody's hiding the line items.
Honest answers
How does the 1-day trial actually work?
You claim a license through the form, the trial flag is attached to your key, and the same build runs for 24 hours from first activation. If you do nothing inside the window, the key expires and you owe zero. If you keep it, you pay the one-time tier price and the same key keeps working — no reinstall, no fresh download.
Is this really one-time, or does something renew later?
One-time. You pay once for the tier, the license stays valid, profile updates ship while the format is supported. There's no annual invoice, no per-seat counter, no auto-charge on a calendar.
Why three tiers and not one?
Different operators run different formats. A NLH-only grinder doesn't need to pay for PLO and OFC profiles they'll never load. A team running mixed games doesn't want to discover halfway in that the cheap tier doesn't cover what they're actually playing. The tiers map to format coverage, not seat counts.
What's the difference between Pro and Master past the price?
Pro covers NLH plus PLO — the two formats most operators actually run. Master adds MTT and OFC on top, and you get whatever future formats the engine ships without paying again. Pro is the right pick if you only play hold'em and Omaha; Master is the right pick if you don't want to think about format gaps ever.
Where does the binary actually come from?
The vendor's release pipeline. Same build that ships to managed seats. Builds are signed with the vendor's release key and version-pinned to your license, so you can verify the artifact you receive is the one the vendor shipped.
Refunds after the trial expires?
No. The trial exists precisely so neither side wastes time after — you've already had the full build running for 24 hours on your own hardware before any money moves.
Do I need to schedule a call?
No. Starter and Pro are buy-button flows. Master includes a one-hour onboarding call after purchase, but that's a setup session — not a screening interview before you're allowed to spend money.
Ready when you are.
Hit the button, get a license, run it on your hardware for a day, decide, pay once.