Can ChatGPT or Perplexity Actually Find You Good Player Props?
It is a tempting shortcut. You open ChatGPT or Perplexity, type "give me three good NBA props tonight," and a few seconds later you have an answer in clean, confident sentences with numbers attached. It reads like a sharp friend who did all the homework for you. So can AI actually find you winning player props? The short answer is no, and understanding exactly why is what separates bettors who lose money to a chatbot from bettors who use the right tool for the job.
Why people think AI can pick player props
A chatbot writes in fluent, certain language. When something tells you "this player goes over this number about 70% of the time" with zero hesitation, your brain reads it as a researched fact. The confidence is doing all the work, and the confidence is exactly the problem. A language model is built to sound right, not to be right, and on betting questions those two things come apart badly.
Why AI cannot actually answer a props question
- It does not know what is happening tonight. A language model is trained on old text with a cutoff date. It does not know who got ruled out at shootaround, who is on a minutes restriction, who just got traded, or what tonight's line even is. Betting is a live-information game, and AI is working from a frozen snapshot of the past.
- It is a writing tool, not a stats engine. It cannot open a database, pull a player's last 20 game logs, and count how many times he cleared a number. It predicts the next plausible word in a sentence. "Hits 70% of the time" is a phrase that sounds reasonable, not a figure it actually measured.
- It invents numbers with total confidence. Ask it for a player's points hit rate over his last 10 games and it will hand you a clean, specific percentage. It did not calculate that. It generated it. For a bettor, a confident wrong number is far more dangerous than no number at all, because you will actually bet on it.
- It cannot see the odds, so it cannot tell you what is worth betting. A 65% prop at the wrong price is a losing bet. AI has no idea what price you are being offered, which means it cannot tell you the one thing that actually determines whether a bet is good: the value relative to the line.
A 10-second test you can run right now
Do not take our word for it. Ask ChatGPT or Perplexity for any player's hit rate over his last 10 games. Write down the number it gives you. Then go pull the actual box scores and count them yourself. The figures will rarely match. That is not a glitch you can fix with a better prompt, it is the entire nature of the tool: it is generating language that looks like analysis, not measuring reality.
What actually answers the question
Finding a good prop requires three things a chatbot structurally cannot provide: real game logs that are actually counted, calibrated probabilities instead of confident guesses, and the live line sitting right next to the number so you know whether the price is fair. That is exactly what we built, and it is the reason we do not let AI generate a single number anywhere on this site. We wrote a full breakdown of why purpose-built math beats AI black boxes here: Algorithm vs AI. For context, independent reviews have pegged AI pick services at roughly 53% against the spread, nowhere near the 75% to 85% win rates they love to advertise.
Frequently asked questions
Can ChatGPT predict sports outcomes? Not reliably. It cannot access live data, real game logs, or current odds, and it generates plausible-sounding numbers rather than calculating real ones.
Are AI betting picks accurate? Independent testing puts AI pick services around 53% against the spread, far below their advertised claims and not enough to overcome the vig long-term.
What should I use instead of AI for player props? A tool that pulls verified game logs, computes real hit rates, and shows them next to the current betting line, so you are working from measured reality, not generated text.
Here's the bottom line
You do not have a research problem, you have a trust problem. Every "insight" from a chatbot is a guess wearing a lab coat. DataStreak shows you the real last-10, last-20, and full-season hit rate for every player and every prop, computed from actual game logs you can click and verify, with the current line right beside it. No black box, no made-up percentages, no AI. Stop asking a chatbot to guess and start checking the receipts.
See real, verified hit rates for every player in the DataStreak Streak Finder.