The auction started the same at all 16 tables, then the auctions diverged. Some Souths cue bid 2♠, some showed their ♣, some launched straight into Blackwood, and some jumped straight to either 4♥ or 6♥. They all took either 11 or 12 tricks, depending on whether East cashes his ♠A on the opening lead; if not, the spades get discarded on ♣ or ♦.
What turned out to be the common theme was that the bot cashed its Ace at all the tables EXCEPT the ones where South cue bid. So the slam made at the one table where the human cue bid, then bid Blackwood, and bid slam knowing he was missing two key cards and the trump Q (so there isn't even a finesse available for the trump K).
I wonder how that cue bid changed the simulations to make the bots act like this?