Tag Archives: another

Community of Million Gamers – Online Gaming Communities

Are online gaming communities the new members’ clubs or will the next generation of online gamers will be lacking any social skill who cannot recognize a three dimensional object even if it falls on his head? Looking at some of today’s online games shows that despite all the gloomy prophecies, virtual games create a new, bigger, world-wider form of communities based on human interaction.
One of the most ancient and common claims against online gaming was directed towards its anti social nature. Internet opponents saw online gaming as the community enemy, which causes people to prefer the solitary act of playing internet games over taking part in more traditional types of social activities such as playing sports games, visiting the local bingo hall, etc.
However, the growth and the development of online games, made this claim a little bit irrelevant. About ten years of broadband internet access proves the opposite: online gaming is a social activity by nature. From classic card, board, puzzle, and sports games to massive multi player online games (Second life, World of Warcraft, etc), online games are nothing but isolated and/or antisocial.
Let’s take online backgammon for example. Backgammon, the ancient board game, was traditionally played in backgammon clubs as a one-and-one game or a tournament.Backgammon rules used to be spread around in the old fashioned viral marketing – by word of mouth.
But what would do a small town backgammon player who has no backgammon clubs nearby? Online gaming solved this dilemma. The largest online backgammon rooms host hundreds of thousands of players who can practice backgammon games against each other, chat with one another, discuss game tactics and strategy, share information, gossip and do whatever members of community do when gather together.
Another game that proves the importance of the social aspect in today’s online games is Second Life. The relatively new game has become a phenomenon. Although defined as a game, Second Life had shed all traditional characteristics of a game: it has no rules, no strategy and no actual competition or goal.
Instead, Second Life players, excuse me, residents, can keep themselves occupied in various social activities including buying and selling stuff, throwing parties or being invited to ones, exhibiting art objects or visiting art exhibits and involve in other life like behaviors. At the same time they can make new friends and/or foes and experience the entire scope of human emotions towards one another.
These were only two extreme examples – the classic board game turns virtual and the embodiment of the cyberpunk authors’ visions. However, online gaming communities are far richer. Online gaming communities can be based on a shared interest in a certain game or on the abstract idea of interaction. Either way, the basic need in human communication did not pass from the world with 3D web technologies.

Gambling Money Management

Whenever I see the term “Money Management” a red flag goes off in my head. Although some writers using the term do have sound advice on handling a gambling stake, many others that use the term just have harebrained suggestions of betting in patterns that presumably can make one a sure winner at a negative game. The latter is pure nonsense. In this article I hope to give you some sound advice on money matters.
First of all you should have a separate account for gambling money. Frank Scoblete likes to refer to this as his 401G (since I am a retired professor mine is a 403G). There are two very good reasons for doing this. First of all, you should not gamble with money that is dedicated for another purpose. Now although I have a real libertine streak in me, I feel that gambling with money that you need for other things is just plain immoral.
The second reason is that you shouldn’t play with scared money. What do I mean by that? Let me give you an example. Suppose that you are playing Blackjack and you get a pair of threes versus the dealer’s four. The correct play is to split. It’s not a great play but it is the correct play. Then you get another three. Okay, split again. You get a ten on the first three and an eight on the second three; you double the second hand and get a five. Phooey! The third three get hit with a five and then a ten; not a great hand. If you’re playing quarters you now have $100 riding on the outcome. The dealer gets a seven and then a ten for twenty one and you lose $100.
Now let’s suppose that a few hands later you get dealt a pair of twos and the dealer shows a five up. You correctly split. Then you get dealt another two. You think back to those threes and decide to just hit the four total. Error! You’re playing with scared money. You luck out and draw a seven. You think about those threes again and that $100 loss. So you don’t double. Error! You’re playing with scared money and as a result you are not playing optimally.

My next tip is to play for a fixed gain and fixed loss at each session, for example, risking $100 to make $100. Now before you turn up your nose and declare that I am the one giving out harebrained suggestions, hear me out. I do not, repeat, do not think that doing this will change the long run edge of any game. In fact, it will not change it one iota. So why bother? Well, it does change some short-run effects. For one thing it changes the casino from essentially an infinitely rich adversary to one with finite resources. So what? This reduces the ruin probability for that session; you have a better chance of leaving the table with a profit, although in a negative game you’re still more likely to lose than win (positive games are a bit trickier – see my article on Kelly betting in the archives). If you just keep playing with no end in sight, you are a sure loser and that is a mathematical fact.

I recall having dinner with Anthony Curtis and discussing this and he remarked that the only thing that quitting while you’re ahead accomplishes is that sometimes you get to walk around with the casino’s money in your pocket; your average loss in the long run will be unchanged. Of course he was absolutely right. But hey, you come to a casino to enjoy yourself and if sometimes having their money in your pocket is a good feeling, great!
Actually, there is another benefit to playing this way. If you lose your stake for that session you will get up and leave – your fixed loss has been realized and the game is over for now. In other words, you don’t chase your losses. Chasing losses is a good way to gamble over your head.
Finally, if you are disciplined enough to leave the casino with a win under your belt, you can deposit your gains in your 401G and earn interest on it until the next time you play. Even if it’s only a few bucks, it is a profit. In fact, I prefer to open a line of casino credit so that the only time my money leaves my 403G is when I lose.

My last suggestion is probably the most important one. Don’t use credit cards. There are two ways this can occur. One, of course, is on-line gambling which, despite its popularity, I don’t endorse. The other is using the credit card machines that are in every casino. You insert your card, enter your PIN, and the money shows up at the casino cage. Of course you get charged for the transfer so you have already lost some of your stake before you even start to play. But that is not the worst of it. If you rack up a large balance gambling, one that you cannot afford to pay, you are going to end up paying dearly and for a long time. This brings me to credit cards in general. They can be a dangerous phenomenon, and in my opinion their misuse is encouraged by the American banking industry. Let me show you why they can be so dangerous.

I have a credit card (that I pay off each month) and it has the following terms. The annual percentage rate is 18 of the unpaid balance. Let us suppose that I make a $2000 loan with this card. Further suppose that I never add another penny to the balance and simply pay it off using the minimum monthly payment. How much money do you think I pay back to the credit card company and how long do you think it will take me to reduce my balance to zero? The answer is that I will return $6174.60 to them and it will take me 23 years and 2 months to do that. Those are not misprints. With this example in mind, suppose that I do use my card every month to make purchases (as do most of us) and that I always pay the minimum allowed. In this case I will be in debt to this company for the rest of my life and, once my card is maxed out, I will be using money I would like to have for other things to pay this usury loan. Not a pretty picture is it?