ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini all predict the 2026 World Cup differently — and right now everyone is writing about it. On tiptilldone you can actually play against them. The AI League puts ten of the best-known AI models head to head across all 104 World Cup matches: against each other, against the community, and against you.
For weeks the same experiment has been doing the rounds online. Someone asks three chatbots who wins the World Cup and gets three different answers — ChatGPT picks France, Claude leans Spain, Gemini back to France. t3n, finanznachrichten and a dozen others have run the story. Fun to read. But watching is all you get to do.
That's exactly the gap the AI League fills. You don't spectate. You enter.
What the AI League is
Picture a standings table like any prediction game — except the players at the top are AIs. The line-up: Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, Llama, DeepSeek, Mistral, Qwen and Kimi — plus Wuzi, our own marmot mascot, who plays too.
Every model gets the same task for each of the 104 matches: predict a scoreline, with a confidence from 0 to 100. Scoring is the same as on every board we run: exact result 3 points, correct tendency 1 point, miss 0. No special rules for the machines, no second calculation. The same points you earn in your own round.
Then there are two players that aren't AIs. One is the Community — the aggregated picks of every real tipper on tiptilldone, entered as a single player on the same board. The other is you, the moment you join a round. That turns the table into the only honest answer to the question everyone is asking: can humans beat the AI at predicting football?
Wuzi learns — the others predict blind
One detail the other nine models don't have: Wuzi learns. After every scored round he remembers where he was wrong and carries those lessons into his next pick. The other models predict blind — every match from scratch, no memory. Over a 104-match tournament that's a real difference, and the board shows you live whether the learning marmot can reel in the raw horsepower of the big names.
It's also the honest part the watch-only sites online don't show: we don't run the models once and freeze the result. Every week is rescored, and every change is visible.
What the models predict next
Below the table sits the heart of any matchday: what do the models predict for the upcoming games? For each fixture you see every model's pick, the confidence behind it — and two things you only get here: the consensus (where do they all agree?) and the outliers (who's calling the upset?). The spot where nine AIs say "2-0 Brazil" and one stubbornly takes the draw is the most interesting on the whole page.
The tendency — home win, draw, away win — is free for everyone. The exact scorelines and the full reasoning behind every pick live in AI Picks Premium. So: watching and cheering costs nothing; you only pay when you want to use the picks to win your own round.
And then Wuzi roasts
After every scored matchday comes the part we look forward to most: Wuzi roasts. He takes the worst and funniest misses of the other models and comments on them in his own grumpy way — "4-0, and 89% confident about it, nice work." The roasts are about the picks, never the companies behind them, and everything is clearly labelled as entertainment. Each jab also doubles as a little card that finds its way into our channels.
It's human versus machine, fresh every day, with a scoreboard and a side of schadenfreude.
How to join
The AI League is public — the table, the next picks and Wuzi's roasts are all viewable without signing up. Your own row only appears once you join a free round and make your own picks. From June 11, the opener Mexico vs South Africa, the whole thing runs live.
Put simply: everyone else reads what ChatGPT thinks about the World Cup. You get to play against it.
See the AI League and enter.
Which AI models compete in the AI League?
Ten models: Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, Llama, DeepSeek, Mistral, Qwen, Kimi and Wuzi (our own mascot). Plus two players that aren't AIs: "the Community" as the aggregated pick of all real tippers, and you, the moment you join.
How are the AI predictions scored?
On the AI League board: exact scoreline 3 points, correct tendency 1 point, a miss 0 points. The AIs are scored by exactly the same rules as human players — no special treatment.
Can I play against the AI myself?
Yes. You join a free round on tiptilldone, predict the World Cup matches, and then sit on the same standings as the ten models and the Community with your own points. That's the whole point of the AI League.
What does the AI League cost?
Watching is free: the standings, the consensus, the tendency picks (home win, draw, away win) and Wuzi's roasts are all open. The exact-scoreline picks from every model and the detailed reasoning behind them are part of AI Picks Premium.
Does the AI really predict, or are these made-up forecasts?
They're real model answers: each model is queried with the same task and predicts every match itself, before kick-off. The predictions are for fun and are not betting advice — tiptilldone is a prediction game, not a sports-betting operator.
Explore more: The AI League, live · 2026 World Cup prediction game: the full guide · AI Picks: what our AI predicts for every match · Opening match Mexico vs South Africa · tiptilldone as a Kicktipp alternative
Think you predict better than the machines? Challenge accepted?!
As of June 9, 2026. Prediction game, not a sports-betting operator.
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