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Consistent Winners is a section on Pikkit's Discover page that surfaces bettors who have posted a positive ROI for seven weeks. Every record is pulled straight from synced sportsbook accounts through BookSync, so the list is built on verified results, not screenshots or claims.
That seven-week bar is the whole point. Anyone can win for a few days. A single hot week tells you nothing about skill. A bettor who stays green for seven weeks running has survived losing stretches and kept a positive return through them. That is what a real edge actually looks like. This guide covers exactly how the section works, how a bettor earns a spot, what each card shows you, and how to turn the list into a follow strategy that helps your own results.
Consistent Winners is a discovery surface inside the Pikkit app, part of the Discover page. Its job is narrow and useful: show you bettors whose profitability has held up over a sustained run, so you have a verified starting point for who to follow.
It is not a tip sheet and not a list of loud accounts. It is closer to a leaderboard of demonstrated results. Because it is built on synced data, the bettors on it cannot pick which weeks to show you. The wins and the losses are both in the record, and the section only promotes the accounts whose net result has stayed positive week after week.
A bettor is added to Consistent Winners once they have posted a positive ROI for seven weeks. That is the qualifying rule, and it is deliberately strict.
Seven weeks is long enough to filter out variance. Over a few days or a single week, a losing bettor can look like a winner purely by luck. Stretch the requirement to seven weeks and luck stops being a plausible explanation, because staying positive that long means the bettor kept beating the price through normal ups and downs. The section is designed so that appearing on it is earned, not granted for a good weekend.
Two things follow from how the rule works:
Every card is built to answer the consistency question at a glance. It shows three things:

Read the trend graph before anything else. The shape of the line tells you whether you are looking at a stable edge or a bettor who is one cold week away from dropping off the list. A gently rising line held over many weeks is the strongest signal on the card.
The trap most people fall into is following whoever is hottest this week. The problem is that "hot right now" and "good over time" are different measurements, and they often point at different bettors.
Picture two accounts, both positive today. The first has climbed steadily for seven or eight weeks, with normal dips along the way. The second was flat or negative for a month, then spiked in the last few days. Both look green in a snapshot. Only the first has demonstrated consistency. That account has stayed profitable through losing stretches instead of riding a single run. The Consistent Winners rule is built to promote the first bettor and ignore the second.
This is also why ROI matters more than win rate when you evaluate anyone on the list. ROI measures profit per dollar risked and already accounts for the odds a bettor took. A 5% ROI means five dollars of profit for every hundred wagered. Win rate on its own is misleading: a bettor hitting 55% at -200 is losing money, while a bettor hitting 42% on plus-money underdogs can be strongly profitable. Lead with ROI, and treat win rate as context.
The reason Consistent Winners means something is that nobody on it can fake their way in. Every bet on Pikkit is synced directly from users' sportsbook accounts through BookSync, so there is no self-reporting and no cherry-picking. A bettor cannot crop the losing weeks or post only the winners. The full ledger is what feeds the ROI calculation, and the ROI calculation is what decides who qualifies.
That verification is the difference between Consistent Winners and the screenshots you see in group chats and on social media. Across more than 1M tracked bets on Pikkit, the records are what they are, which is exactly what makes a seven-week positive run worth paying attention to.
Consistent Winners gives you a shortlist. What you do with it matters, and the safe order is to follow before you copy.
Following a bettor puts their bets in your feed in real time, including the sportsbook, the odds, and the stake. You watch, you learn how they think, and you decide what to do with the information. Copying means placing the same bet yourself with one tap, sized to your own bankroll or matched to theirs.
Watching a qualified bettor for a couple of weeks before copying tells you whether their style fits the sports and markets you actually play. Many of the strongest bettors are specialists, so a great NFL props bettor may give a baseball bettor very little to use. Copy the bets you understand and would defend on your own, and skip the ones you cannot explain. Copying blind is how people bail at the worst possible moment, right when a good bettor is going through a normal cold stretch. For a deeper walkthrough of evaluating a full profile, see how to find profitable bettors to follow.
Following verified winners only helps if it moves your own numbers, and the only way to know is to measure it.
Pikkit's Following Leaderboard ranks the bettors you personally follow by their current ROI and recent win-loss record. It answers a practical question fast: which of the people you are tailing are making money right now, and which have gone cold enough to reconsider. Pair that with your own bet tracker, which shows whether the bets you copied actually added profit, broken down by sport and bet type. If you want the sharpest read on whether a bettor's edge is real, closing line value is the strongest single signal, because a bettor who consistently beats the closing line is doing something right regardless of a rough week.
Open the Discover page and treat Consistent Winners as your shortlist of verified, seven-week-plus performers. Favor steady trend lines over spikes, open the profiles whose strongest markets match yours, and follow three to five with different styles. Watch the feed for a couple of weeks, then let your own tracked results tell you who is worth copying.
Consistent Winners is not a secret list of famous names. It is the set of bettors whose verified numbers have held up for seven weeks and counting. Find the ones that fit how you bet, follow them, and measure what happens to your record.
Download Pikkit to browse Consistent Winners on Discover and start following verified winners today.
Consistent Winners is a section on Pikkit's Discover page that highlights bettors who have posted a positive ROI for seven weeks. Each card shows the bettor's username, their current winning streak in weeks, and an ROI trend graph. Every record is verified through BookSync, so there is no self-reporting and no cherry-picking.
A bettor qualifies for Consistent Winners once they have maintained a positive ROI for seven weeks. The seven-week requirement filters out short-term luck, since staying profitable that long reflects a real edge rather than a single hot streak. If a bettor's ROI drops below positive, they fall out of qualification, so the list reflects who is winning now.
Seven weeks is long enough that variance stops being a plausible explanation for a positive return. Over a few days, a mediocre bettor can look profitable by luck. A bettor who stays positive across seven weeks has held their edge through normal losing stretches, which is the trait worth following.
The ROI trend graph shows the trajectory of a bettor's return over time rather than a single number. A steady, gently rising line indicates a durable edge, while a jagged line that barely stays positive is a weaker signal. Reading the shape of the line is the fastest way to judge how trustworthy a bettor's run is.
Yes. Every bet is synced directly from users' sportsbook accounts through Pikkit BookSync, so bettors cannot hide losses or show only wins. The full record feeds the ROI calculation that decides who appears on the list, which is what makes a spot on Consistent Winners meaningful.
Not automatically. Follow a qualified bettor first so you can watch their picks and reasoning before risking anything. Copy only the bets you understand and would place on your own, and size them to your bankroll. Copying picks you cannot explain removes your ability to judge when a bettor has genuinely gone cold.
Yes. ROI measures profit per dollar risked and accounts for the odds a bettor took, while win rate ignores price. A bettor with a high win rate on heavy favorites can still lose money, and a bettor with a lower win rate on underdogs can be strongly profitable. Lead with ROI and use win rate as context.
Yes. Following bettors and viewing their public feed is free on Pikkit, on both iOS and Android. You can browse the Discover page, check the Consistent Winners section, and follow profiles without a subscription.
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