Nike Shoe Bot (NSB) Review 2026: The SNKRS Veteran

SNKRS / Nike focus

4.5 Our score

One of the longest-running names in botting, built around Nike and SNKRS with useful side-modules for Pokémon Center, Amazon and Shopify. The $349/6-month plan rewards committed users; casual botters should start cheaper.

Price
$79/mo or $349/6mo
Whop rating
4.9★ (464 reviews)
Members
231+
Trial
No free trial
View Nike Shoe Bot (NSB) on Whop Opens on Whop, check current pricing there

What we like

  • Survivor of a decade of anti-bot warfare, longevity few bots can claim
  • Nike/SNKRS specialisation plus Pokémon Center, Amazon, Best Buy, adidas, Shopify
  • $349/6mo works out ~$58/month for committed users, all modules included
  • Established support and setup documentation refined over years
  • 4.9 stars from 464 Whop ratings, the strongest social proof of the bots we cover

What to watch

  • $79 on the monthly plan, priciest of the three bots we cover
  • No free trial
  • Much UK Nike heat now moves through raffles, which no bot wins
  • Needs proxies and burner accounts for any serious volume

In a scene where bots appear, dominate one season and vanish, Nike Shoe Bot’s headline feature is the most boring one imaginable: it’s still here. NSB has been checking out sneakers since the mid-2010s, surviving every generation of Nike’s anti-bot defences, and in botting, longevity is the closest thing to a quality guarantee that exists, because it means a dev team that has kept winning an arms race for years. The market agrees: a 4.9-star average across 464 Whop ratings is the strongest score of any bot we cover. At $79/month (or a smarter $349/6-month plan), it’s the specialist option in our bot rankings.

The Nike specialisation, honestly assessed

NSB’s core competence is Nike: SNKRS and Nike.com flows, refined over more years than most competitors have existed. If Nike heat is your business, that depth matters, Nike is the hardest target in retail botting, and generalist bots treat it as one module among dozens.

But here’s the honest UK-specific caveat, and we’d be doing you a disservice to skip it: a lot of UK Nike heat no longer drops in a bottable way. SNKRS draws and retailer raffles (JD, Size?, END) are lotteries, a bot cannot win a raffle for you, only enter efficiently where multiple entries are even possible. NSB earns its money on the rest: non-draw releases, restocks (where speed is everything), and its retail modules. Go in with that map of where bots do and don’t help, or read what a sneaker bot actually does first.

The side-modules are quietly excellent value

What’s elevated NSB beyond a one-trick bot is its expansion into adjacent heat: Pokémon Center (one of the most bot-contested sites in the collectibles world), Amazon, Walmart and Best Buy (price errors and console restocks), adidas, Asos, PopMart and Shopify, covering collectibles heat from Pokémon cards to Labubus. All modules are included in the price, there’s no à-la-carte upsell, which makes the $349/6-month plan a reasonable all-rounder for someone flipping cards and consoles alongside sneakers.

Pricing: built for the committed

At $79 on the monthly plan, NSB is the most expensive bot we cover, well above Hidden AIO, and a Prime tier at $99/month sits above that. The 6-month plan at $349 (~$58/month effective) is clearly where NSB wants its users, and it changes the calculus: for a committed, active botter the half-year price is competitive. For a curious beginner it’s the wrong door to enter through, there’s no trial, and six months is a long commitment to a hobby you haven’t tested. Start with a single month of Hidden AIO, learn the craft, and graduate to NSB if Nike becomes your lane.

The usual extras apply: proxies (£20–50/month), burner accounts, and ideally a group feeding you drop intelligence, NSB’s own documentation is upfront that proxies and multiple accounts are part of serious setups, which we count in its favour.

Who should buy it (and who shouldn’t)

Buy if: Nike/SNKRS is your primary lane and you’re committed enough for the 6-month plan, or you want one veteran bot spanning sneakers, Pokémon Center and retail.

Look elsewhere if: you’ve never botted before (Hidden AIO’s monthly billing first), your profits live in broad retail arbitrage (Stellar AIO’s 70+ sites), or your Nike strategy is raffles, save the subscription and enter draws manually.

Our verdict

NSB is the established specialist: the deepest Nike pedigree in our coverage, genuinely useful side-modules, and the credibility of a bot that’s outlived most of its rivals. It ranks third for us purely on accessibility, the highest monthly price, no trial, and a specialisation that UK raffle culture has partially eroded. For the committed Nike-first reseller, though, it remains the standard.

How we assessed this bot

This review is editorial research, not sponsored content. We verified the bot’s live Whop listing on 11 June 2026, pricing, plans and its review score and volume, and read user feedback on Whop alongside independent bot coverage and the developer’s own documentation. We don’t run task-count benchmarks ourselves; where a performance claim comes from users or third-party testers, the text says so. Remember that bot performance shifts week to week as retailers update their defences, recent reviews matter more than old ones. Our scoring criteria are published on how we rank.

Pricing at a glance

TierPriceWhat you get
Monthly$79/moAll modules, all regions, Nike/SNKRS, Pokémon Center, Amazon, Best Buy, adidas, Shopify
6-month$349/6moSame access at ~$58/month effective

Prices verified on Whop at the time of writing, always check the live page before joining.

Frequently asked questions

How much does Nike Shoe Bot cost?

$79/month on the live Whop listing, or $349 for six months (about $58/month) with all modules included. A Prime tier at $99/month also exists (see the live listing). Check the live listing for current pricing.

What does NSB support besides Nike?

Alongside Nike/SNKRS it runs modules for Pokémon Center, Amazon, Best Buy, adidas and Shopify stores, so it stretches into cards and retail, though Nike remains the core competence.

Is a Nike bot still worth it in the UK?

It depends on your targets. A large share of UK Nike heat now releases via SNKRS draws and retailer raffles, which bots can't win for you. NSB earns its keep on non-draw drops, restocks and the retail modules, go in understanding that distinction.

Does NSB need proxies?

Yes, for anything beyond a single casual task, budget £20–50/month for residential proxies plus time to set up extra accounts. NSB itself flags this in its own documentation.