Originally Posted by
accountinquestion
Originally Posted by
redietz
I can't believe I'm semi-defending Singer and Alan's son, but here goes:
I think the phrase "lose more money" speaks volumes and cuts to the chase. Assuming, as video poker goes these days, that you don't have Bob Dancer's slot ratings or possible rebates, then you are playing a negative expectation game, as 99.9% of all people are. Then as long as you are operating on a set budget, how you play has nothing to do with how much you lose. Your budget determines how much you lose. That's the reality for at least 99.9% of the population. This is not 1990. If Bob Dancer, Jean Scott, and Richard Munchkin are all struggling with vp, then one can assume people are not really operating at (cough, gag) +EV in terms of making actual cash.
Now, if you are a sucker for "time on device," the industry phrase, and are addicts, then I guess how you play matters.
As far as comps go, the non-optimal player playing fewer hours is going to (at some point) get more generous status faster than the optimal player, or at least that's how things have been trending. So you can't even argue that playing more hours by playing optimally yields more comps. It may not. In fact, it probably won't going forward.
Rob's nutcase level jumping, whatever its non-optimal nature and deficits, created a nutcase profile, which I'm sure has led to much better offers than somebody grinding optimally.
In conclusion, as long as you're adhering to a budget, since video poker is a losing proposition for pretty much 990 out of 1000 players, it doesn't make much difference to that budget if you are playing optimally or not. You will lose. The question is how fast. And unless you're an addict, who cares how fast?
From my perspective, I play enough video poker to get on comp radars. I'm ahead about 5K lifetime playing vp. I expect a long downhill trend going forward, because pay tables suck, but I think being precise with games, counts and amounts, and timing of the play will yield a (cough, gag) +EV if you count meals, rooms, and cash back. I don't expect Alan's son or Rob to copy me, because that is not who they are, and they have other priorities. I was happy to get between a dozen and two dozen nights a year and a couple dozen meals comped at Boyd, for example, which ended about eight years ago. That was my goal for playing a very modest amount of VP.
I doubt many people are making substantive actual money on video poker. You'd have to be operating at Dancer-type levels to do that, and even he has run into sustained rugged outcomes the last couple of years.
Rob talks about hitting certain win levels and quitting. Ok fine I get fun gambling and all but that's not what the play does. It stretches out a bankroll. You play vp all your life, you may very well have missed a 4000x payout on a trip by doing this. This is not a point I see being made.
The play simply doesn't make sense in the context in which singer talks. If you want to stretch out your trip bankroll then sure, this will keep you in action. You draw a8 and wonder if the a would have come keeping aaa4. It goes both ways.
When I played that strategy for 4 years, my goal was not to stretch the $57,200 bankroll I used each weekly trip. It was to win a mere approx. 5% of that bankroll using a very complex method of varying denominations, games, volatility levels, and a 40-credit minimum soft profit cash-out. And in just over 200 Nevada trips to every corner of the state, the win rate was near 90%.
At this point, critics like to say "but the 10%+ times you did not win were -$57,200 disasters, which would have made all your other $2500 wins meaningless because you lost overall!"
But they would be wrong. The play stops as soon as I've played thru my 400 $100 credits. Along the way, thanks to numerous "soft profit" cash-outs, the session loss is never $57,200. My largest ever loss was $33,000. The next largest was $11,000, and it goes down from there--all the way down to a $700 loss.
At the same time there were several $100,000 wins and quite a few 5-figure wins between $10k and $40k. And of course, most wins were more than $3k. This is how the strategy netted me about a $375k profit over those 4 years, with much of it documented in my Gaming Today column.
I'm not saying this would work for everyone because it won't. I trained many players, and only 1 other player (a successful businessman in LV) had the aptitude, intelligence, determination, bankroll and discipline I have in order to pull it off correctly.
If it was so successful then why stop playing it after only 4 years? Because I found a much better/extremely high +EV play with the DU bug. But at the time that play abruptly ended thanks to the two greedy dildos who got arrested playing it stupidly, I got tired of the weekly round-trip drive between Phx. & Nv. My wife retired, we bought an RV, we lived in it and traveled for the next 5 years, and I chose to only play for entertainment after my professional vp player career ended.
I realize this re-cap will cause a bit of distress among those of lessor ambition and ability. All I can say is: TOUGH LOVE!
