Page 17 - May 2004 • Southern California Gaming Guide
P. 17
When to Walk...Knowing When to Quit is the Key to Fun! by Jean Scott
“How do I know when I should quit playing a particular machine?” is is probably the most frequent question I am asked. Although it’s a basic query, the answer is not so straightforward.
Emotions Tell You to Walk
• When you reach your personal win/loss limit.
• Whenyou’relosingandit’sgettingtoyou.A“fresh start” on a new machine or a short break can do wonders for your mood.
• When you’ve been up and down for a long period of playing time and nally get even or up a little. Being on a gambling roller coaster is an exhilarating but exhausting ride, and sometimes Brad and I choose to quit a session when we have nally achieved a small win.
• When you’re getting bored or you just aren’t having fun.
• When you win a jackpot. However, this is not for the reason that most people give when they do so: “Now this machine won’t be due for another jackpot
for a long time.” Remember, there is no little computer chip that tells the machine not to give another jackpot right away. e machine has the same mathematical chance to give a jackpot on the next hand as a week
later. However, there is a valid psychological reason for many people to walk after a big win: It’s fun to celebrate! e joy of winning is a universal human emotion. Stop and savor the feeling!
Jean Scott, the “Queen of Comps,” is the author of the best-selling book The Frugal Gambler, a casino guide for thrifty low rollers, plus the sequel, More Frugal Gambling, now available at www.FrugalGambler.biz. Featured on “Dateline NBC,” “48 Hours,” and The Travel Channel, she stresses sensible, responsible gambling and shows how to stretch out casino fun time whatever your gambling bankroll.
Math Tells You to Walk
• When you’re playing a negative-expectation game (one in which the casino has the edge and over the long run you’re mathematically guaranteed to lose). Serious gamblers and professionals, whose main interest is pro t, will tell you to walk away from that kind of game even before you drop in a single coin. However, the goal of casual players is entertainment. ey’re looking for the fun factor. ey want to play a variety of machines and they don’t want to learn complicated strategies. ey’re hoping for the big win and are depending on luck. However, math can still be their ally. ey can
“walk” often, bouncing from machine to machine with wild abandon. e more time they spend changing machines instead of actually playing them, the less they will lose. e money they don’t lose is money won!
• When a promotion—one that made a bad or so- so play a good one—ends. We’ve played many negative-expectation games when a promotion transformed the casino edge into an advantage for us — but when the promotion was over, we walked.
Common Sense Tells You to Walk
• When you’re hungry, tired, or need a bathroom break. When you haven’t eaten for a long time, your blood sugar level drops and you can’t think clearly. When your eyes start to blur from staring too long at a video screen or spinning reels and when your shoulders, arms, and back start to burn from sitting too long in the same position, you will not make wise decisions.
• Whentheenvironmentisnotpleasant,comfortable, or healthy. I often have to change machines when the air-conditioning is blasting Arctic air directly
down on my already-aching neck and shoulders. Another typical “move” situation comes when the smoke from the cigarette of the person right beside me is drifting straight into my poor allergy-suffering sinuses. You may want to move if the seat is uncomfortable or your chatterbox neighbor is a whining pessimist or a constant
complainer.
• When the machine you’re playing has a fuzzy or jumpy screen that gives you a headache, or the bill acceptor doesn’t work and you hate to feed coins, or there is a sticky video
poker button that causes you to make mistakes on your card holding.
• When you’ve lost the
money you budgeted for
that particular gambling
session. In this instance,
walking means straight
out of the casino, into
your car, and out of the
parking lot. There should
be no side trips to the
cage to cash a check or
to the atm machine to lay your hands on money that you earmarked for other purposes.
• When your partner wants you to quit and join him or her in a non-gambling activity. I don’t have exact statistics on how many relationships break up in a casino, but I suspect there are many. Try to consider these “interruptions” as desirable breaks from the intensity of gambling. Besides, even gamblers need to stop and smell the roses.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GAMING GUIDE
“When you’ve lost the money you budgeted for that particular gambling session. In this instance, walking means straight out of the casino, into your car, and out of the parking lot. There should be no side trips to the cage to cash a check or to the atm machine to lay your hands on money that you earmarked for other purposes.”
May 2004 Page 17
Column: Jean Scott: The Frugal GamblerTM