Hi Lo Miracle Review
OK, now that I have used it for a day, let’s get this review under way.
Initial Impression – When you purchase Hi Lo Miracle, you get a massive Zip file that contains three items – a video to guide you, betting software to help you and a PDF guide to explain the system. As I am familiar with Betfair and Hi Lo, I have not viewed the video but I will examine it for my final report at the end of this review.
The instructions in the guide take the user through the process of setting up a Betfair account, installation of the betting software supplied by Hi Lo Miracle and a description of the HiLo Exchange game so this is suitable for complete newbies. The software is a progressive lay bet calculator and tracker that allows the user to win a desired amount on either each game or each cycle. The author recommends winning a small amount on each cycle to minimise the amount of money risked.
The System – Rule No. 1 – Hit and Run, that’s what it says. The author claims that Betfair uses a number of different algorithms to select the cards in Exchange games and that these can change suddenly, thereby, causing the failure of a winning strategy so the user is advised not to play the whole day to reduce the risk of being hit by losses. Sound advice if you are playing big stakes but if your stakes are small, how do you hit and run? You have to stay at the table until your desired target is reached or at least come back enough times. Apart from saying don’t play the whole day, no guidance is offered about how long and how often one should play. This point is reinforced later when the author claims that one can easily win £100 a day using a win £2 per cycle strategy. Is it possible? Maybe but let’s see what our 14-day test says.
The system also recommends a stop loss at £80 for a win £2 per cycle strategy (the author’s preferred and recommended strategy) and an odds range to lay the cards. A starting bank of £500 is recommended and £1000 is often referred to.
OK, so how am I going to run the tests? For fourteen days, I will attempt to win £2 per cycle using the system proposed and stop when one of these two conditions are met – I win £100 in a day or I have played for 4 hours. If I feel like it, I will play more hours. To properly randomise this experiment, the four hours will be randomly selected in one hour intervals through waking hours of the day.
I will post my bank balance each day and then write a final report at the end of this review.
Hi Lo Miracle Review – Daily Summary
I started looking into this after lunch yesterday so it was 3pm by the time I was ready to start testing. I tested the system for four hours at 3pm, 4pm, 7pm and 10pm. The first two hours went well and I made £52. Trouble started in the third hour when I hit the stop loss on the second cycle and ended the hour with a £73 loss. When I resumed playing at 10pm, I thought that would be it but I got hit again, twice, at the sixth and eighth cycles. End result – a loss of £214.50 on Day 1. Not a promising start but let’s see what follows in the next thirteen days.
Total Days 1
Starting balance = £1000
Hours played = 4
Day 1 (20 January 2010)
Hour 1 – 12 cycles completed (+£24)
Hour 2 – 14 cycles completed (+£28)
Hour 3 – 12 cycles completed (-£72.94)
Hour 4 – 8 cycles completed (-£193.56)
Balance at end of day = £785.50 (-214.50)
Jon




