Why geography decides the bot question
On a public poker site, a bot fights one opponent: the operator's anti-cheat. On AAPoker the app is the same everywhere, but the people around it are not. A club in one market may be a loose friend group settling in cash; in another it is a multi-hop 代理 chain moving 钻石 across borders. The further a player sits from the club's home market, the more humans stand between them and a payout — and every one of those humans can freeze an account on suspicion alone.
That is the thread running through this whole site: the technical limits on a bot are identical in every region (the cards and shuffle live on AAPoker's servers, so no client tool can read hole cards or touch the RNG), but the economic limits change market to market. Where settlement chains are long and informal, a "防封" promise is worthless and 外挂 sellers thrive on confusion. Where clubs are small and trust is direct, the same tools have fewer places to hide.
Start with the regional map to see how each market is wired, then read Settlement for the 钻石 chain that ties them together.