You can use structured intuition training through the ARV method to make better real-life decisions — like choosing a hotel.
Can Intuition Help You Choose a Better Hotel?
Did you know that trusting your gut often works better than overthinking?
In Gut Feelings (2007), Dr. Gerd Gigerenzer of the Max Planck Institute shows that gut instincts often beat expert calculations.
The thing is overthinking requires deliberate, slow analysis, which can be less accurate in uncertain or complex situations.
This is called the “paradox of rationality”.
Intuition Without Structure Is Unreliable
However, intuition is not automatically reliable.
We are all born with a basic “gut sense,” but transforming it into a skillful, dependable tool requires experience and training which can be hard. Because you need consistent setups and clear feedback to rely on it.
VEREVIO helps solve this problem.
According to ARV (Associative Remote Viewing) experiments, people may access intuitive information about future events through association.
Sounds impossible? In 1983, scientists Russell Targ and Keith Harary reportedly applied the method to silver futures trading. The result: around $120,000 in profit.
VEREVIO took this concept and developed an intuition trainer called MatchCast.
“MatchCast” gives you prediction drills without needing a live partner.
Here you can train your gut feelings on almost anything — “Which hotel will be the best for me?”, “Which team will win the next UEFA European Championship?”, “Will Bitcoin close higher or lower at the end of this quarter?”, “How likely is World War III?”, etc.
Practical ARV with VEREVIO MatchCast: A Hotel Example
The core idea of ARV is simple.
Some targets are difficult to interpret correctly.
To reduce interpretation errors, the associative remote viewing method was introduced.
Instead of trying to describe a complex outcome directly, you associate each possible result with something simple — something you are good at recognizing.
For example:
- Lifeform vs Manmade
- Hot vs Cold
These are clear and polar categories.
Tip: You can first train these basic distinctions in VEREVIO trainers like Tetrad or Scan Box, Pentad Cards.
For the experiment to be clean, you must NOT know which outcome is linked to which target.
The tasker aka VEREVIO assigns each possible result to a separate target. You should not know which object is linked to which outcome. All magic extraction and randomization happens server-side.
1 Define the Task and Call the Prediction Session
From theory to practice.
You decided you want to choose which hotel will be better for you:
- Ritz
- or Plaza
You also know the future moment when you will experience the result — for example, during your next vacation.
Here is how you call the prediction session:
“Ritz vs Plaza -> Reveal Date: 5.05.2026”
Next, you choose the perception type:
- Precognition (future)
- Postcognition (past)
- Telepathy (mind reading)
In ARV, precognition is most commonly used — future events.
We will focus on it.
2 Write a Clear Instruction
Upon starting the trial, the operator receives a Target Number linked to the image assigned to the event outcome that will be true on the Reveal Date.
The operator is to perceive, in the best way possible, the image linked to that Target Number, knowing it will be released only after the Reveal Date.
Clear evaluation criteria are important.
Example:
Perceive the image which will be revealed on May 5, 2026.
The number of possible outcomes should be limited.
The method works best with:
- 2 options
- Maximum 4 options
More options reduce clarity.
3 Set the Reveal Date
You enter the date in the calendar.
The trainer has this built in.
You can enable notifications so you don’t forget to check the result.
4 Making the Prediction
Review your brief. Then click Start Prediction.
Choose a trainer. MatchCast is built around classic Stage-1 skills: catching a clean gestalt and tying it to an outcome image and uses First Impression trainer as default, but you can practice with any trainer.
Actually, it is best to use the one where your intuition works strongest.
In this example, we choose Scan Box – Hot or Cold.
You receive a Target Number.
Now focus on the future moment — the moment when you will know the result.
Each outcome is secretly linked to a different image with a distinct gestalt. Instead of predicting the event directly, you try to perceive the image associated with the outcome that will be true.
You make a choice.
Hot.

The system translates your perception into the predicted outcome.
Example: Hot → Ritz
You can also test the same question in other trainers. For example:
- Scan Box
- First Impressions
- Tetrad
- Tarot Cards
Then compare the signals from different trainers.
If you miss the target, the system shows “No Match.”
What does “No Match” mean?
It usually means one of two things:
- The event may not happen in the future. There are “no records” about it. In this case, your prediction is invalid.
- You did not lock onto the target. This means you were unable to catch the signal or tune in correctly.
If this happens, it is better not to force a choice based on what you think might be correct. Instead, take a break, relax, calm your mind, and try again later.
5 Enter Results on the Reveal Date
When the Reveal Date arrives, you enter the real result.
Example: “Ritz was better.”
You input the data and review the feedback image.
You can now continue practicing with any question or scenario you choose. Skill improves through repetition.
In conclusion
Choosing a hotel may seem like a simple decision, yet it reflects a larger question: how do we make choices when certainty is impossible? ARV offers a structured way to test and train intuition instead of relying on guesswork or endless analysis.
The deeper idea is this: intuition is not the opposite of rationality — it is another form of intelligence. When trained with feedback and discipline, it becomes a measurable skill. Perhaps the real value of ARV is not just predicting which hotel will be better, but learning how to trust — and verify — your own inner signal.