What gets called "Lucky Jet signals"
A signal is a message in the format "the next round will end at multiplier X". It is usually posted in a Telegram channel with a time reference: "place a bet now, target multiplier 3.45×, exit before 2.80×". Some channels add a picture of a "predictor robot" or a screenshot of an "analysis algorithm" to create an impression of technical soundness.
The topic's popularity is explained by the simple math of hope: if a Telegram channel gives you a prediction for free with a claimed accuracy of 90%, then even at a $1,000 bet per round you could "earn" thousands a day. That is far prettier than the real statistics of crash games, where the expected value is −3% of every bet.
The problem is that this picture is entirely false — and it is built to look plausible.
Anatomy of a scam channel: the real economics
The first question that should occur to any skeptical reader: if the channel's author can really predict Lucky Jet rounds with 90% accuracy, why is he handing out predictions for free? What is stopping him from playing himself and getting rich?
The answer is simple: the channel earns not from the accuracy of its predictions, but from attracting players to a specific casino. This is called an affiliate scheme (affiliate marketing). Here is how it works:
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Registering in the casino's affiliate program
Any large online casino whose platform hosts Lucky Jet (for example, 1Win, Pin-Up, BC.Game, Stake) has a public affiliate program. Anyone can register and get a unique referral link — for example,
1win-partner.com/?p=abc123. -
Creating a channel and posting "signals"
The channel's author comes up with a name ("Lucky Jet Signals PRO", "Lucky Jet VIP channel", "Predictions from a professional"), posts staged screenshots with "successful" predictions, and ties access to the referral link: "the signals only work if you register through this link".
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Earning a commission on every player
When a subscriber registers through the link and tops up a deposit, the channel's author gets a commission. The terms are standard: a CPA payout of $30–150 for each new player, plus a RevShare of 25–50% of that player's net losses for life. The more a player loses at the casino, the more the channel's author earns.
It is in the author's interest for his subscribers to lose. The longer and more they play, the bigger his commission. The accuracy of the "signals" here plays the role of bait, not a real service: the channel's task is to keep the player at the casino as long as possible.
How the "90% accuracy" statistic is faked
Every Telegram channel with signals shows "proof" in the form of screenshots and a history of successful predictions. This proof is faked in a few simple ways.
1. Selective publication (cherry-picking)
The channel posts 20–30 signals a day. Of these, on average, 3–5 randomly "coincide" with the real multipliers. The channel screenshots only these successful ones and posts them in a separate "hall of fame". All the rest are silently ignored or deleted.
Over the long run, random coincidences create a convincing "gallery of wins" — several hundred screenshots with "guessed" multipliers. No one counts how many signals failed.
2. Editing after the fact
Telegram allows messages to be edited after posting. The channel posts a signal in the style of "next round: multiplier around 2.0–3.5". After the round, the message is edited so the numbers exactly match the actual result: "the prediction was 2.78×, the actual result was 2.78× — a precise hit". The "edited" label in Telegram is barely noticeable, and most subscribers don't see it.
3. Fake screenshots with a phony bot
Some channels use forged screenshots in which a "predictor bot" shows the multiplier BEFORE the round and then supposedly confirms it. This is easy to do in any image editor — the channel's author simply draws what he wants after the actual round.
4. The author's test bet + deleting the failures
The slyest scheme: the author plays with his own money, betting small amounts and posting signals in real time. When it coincides — hooray, a screenshot to the channel. When it doesn't — the message is quietly deleted or buried under posts of supportive rhetoric. The author loses a little money, but gets many "convincing" coincidences.
The invisible monetization: the referral system
Understanding exactly how casino affiliate programs work explains everything else. Consider the typical terms:
| Model | What the author gets | When they pay |
|---|---|---|
| CPA | $30–150 one-time | For a player's registration + first deposit |
| RevShare | 25–50% for life | A percentage of the player's net loss at the casino |
| Hybrid | CPA + RevShare | A combination of both models |
If a channel brought 1,000 subscribers to a casino, of whom 200 registered and made a deposit, and 50 of them play regularly, that gives the author $6,000–30,000 in one-time CPA payouts up front, plus a steady stream of RevShare. The longer these players play (and lose), the bigger the passive income.
The paradox of "free signals" is resolved simply: the signals are free because they aren't supposed to be accurate. Their task is to make you register and start playing. After that, the game's statistics (a 97% RTP) take care of ensuring the channel's author gets his percentage.
Red flags — how to spot a scam
If a channel has even one of these signs, it is with high probability a scam:
- The channel names a specific multiplier for a future round ("the next one is 3.45×"). Technically impossible because of Provably Fair.
- Connecting the "signals" is only possible by registering through a specific link — the main sign of an affiliate scheme.
- A "VIP channel", "premium signals" for a fee — they sell "more accurate" predictions that don't exist.
- They offer to download an APK app, a "Lucky Jet predictor" — almost certainly a trojan or phishing.
- The "proof" is only screenshots, with no live verification, no public log of all signals with timestamps.
- The channel's author is anonymous, with no first or last name, doesn't show their face, isn't tied to a legal entity.
- The channel description has excuses like "only works on new accounts", "you need a deposit of $5,000+", "not for all casinos".
- The channel's chat has only praise, critical comments are deleted, and critics are banned.
If you have already lost money
The hardest thing about signal scam schemes is that the victim rarely realizes they are a victim. Losses at the casino are easy to write off as "bad luck", and paying for a VIP subscription as "I decided to try it". If you've read this far and realized you've been caught in this scheme, here is what you can do:
- Cancel the subscription or delete the dubious apps. This is the first and only truly useful step.
- If you paid by card in the last 2–4 months, try to dispute the transaction through your bank (a chargeback). With cryptocurrency it is almost unrealistic.
- Gather evidence: screenshots of the channel's promises, receipts, correspondence with "support". This will be useful for a complaint.
- Report the channel in Telegram (the "Report" button → "Scam"). A useful step, though a slow one.
- If there are real financial losses, file a fraud report with your local police. The chances of getting the money back are low, but the case will be on record, and with enough complaints the channel may be blocked.
- Most importantly — don't try to "win it back" through another channel or casino. This is typical secondary victimization: scam victims often become targets of "fund-recovery helpers" who are also fraudsters.
If the game has already stopped being entertainment, this is not a financial question but a psychological one, and it is not solved through getting money back. Move to the "Responsible gambling" section — it has a list of free support services in several languages.