About: Auditing the Chaos

Who We Are

Illogic Sports was founded by a Process Improvement Specialist with a career dedicated to reducing variation and improving system capability. After years of seeing "black box" betting systems promise guaranteed returns, we decided to perform a clinical audit on the industry itself.

The Experiment: The '95 Sim-Audit

How much "logic" actually goes into a sports result? To test this, we use a "machine" that hasn't been updated in three decades: NHL '95.

Every day, we run a three-pronged simulation experiment:

Group A: The Control

A pure CPU vs. CPU simulation. No human bias, just 1994 code vs. 1994 code.

Group B: Home Bias

A human operator (The Auditor) controls the Home team to test if "skill" can overcome the engine.

Group C: Road Warrior

A human operator controls the Visiting team to test the impact of situational disadvantage.

The Goal

We aren't here to give you "picks." We are here to provide a Process Audit. By displaying our virtual Profit & Loss alongside real-world outcomes, we aim to visualize the sheer randomness of sports betting.

"If our 16-bit 'auditor' performs just as well (or poorly) as the 'experts,' it proves our thesis: The game is illogical, and the house always wins the war of attrition."

The Human Variable

While the simulations provide raw data, the Auditor (the human operator) has the final say. For every game, we make one of three calls based on the "Sim Consensus":

✅ ENDORSE

We agree with the machine. A bet is placed on the Sim's pick.

❌ FADE

We think the machine is hallucinating. A bet is placed AGAINST the Sim.

🛑 PASS

Too much chaos. No bet is placed.

The Purple Line on our dashboard tracks this "Human Performance." If it beats the Green Line (Sim A), intuition wins. If it loses, the machine wins.

The Audit Methodology

To maintain a clinical and scientific approach, we use a fixed-unit betting strategy for every simulation. This eliminates "chasing losses" or "betting big" and focuses strictly on the capability of the game engine.

  • Unit Size: Every "bet" is exactly $5.00.
  • Selection Logic: The Sim engine picks a side based solely on the final score of the simulation run. If the Sim ends in a tie, no bet is placed.
  • Payout Math: We use standard American Odds. A win on +150 odds pays $7.50 profit. A win on -110 odds pays $4.55 profit. Any loss results in a flat -$5.00 deduction.

Transparency Commitment

Everything we do is hosted on Cloudflare for maximum transparency. Our data is pulled directly from the markets, and our results are posted immediately—win, lose, or (most likely) draw.