Online Gambling Running Out of Steam 347
dreamchaser writes "After a meteoric rise, online gambling companies appear to be taking a beating now with the loss of 33% in PartyGaming stock. Apparently the novelty is wearing off and no new players can be found. Why have you stopped playing?"
Lack of Suckers (Score:5, Interesting)
My money's on the really big gambling:
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm much more amazed that people are surprized by this considering who's running this country.
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:5, Interesting)
Wired splits the fucking scam right down the middle [wired.com] in their expose.
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:5, Interesting)
Just like card rooms and casinos strive to make their games safe, so do online card rooms strive to detect and eliminate the bots. Their efforts include analysis (some automated, some done by real people) of people's play to find evidence of cheating. They punish the cheaters and do what they can to make reparations to the victims.
There are also problems with credit card fraud in online poker. Someone makes a huge deposit at an online card room, then passes chips to a partner in a high stakes heads up game. Partner cashes out. Original depositor defrauds credit institution by claiming identity theft, and the bank is stuck in a sticky spot. That problem has caused so much trouble that many big banks refuse to allow many kinds of transfers of funds to gaming sites.
I quit dealing with Party Poker over two years ago, because I thought their policies were too invasive of privacy and too restrictive on some simple issues. I have since played PokerStars and UltimateBet, and most recently Full Tilt. I haven't noticed any shrinkage in recent months. PokerStars is the biggest of those three; they have weekly $215 buy-in tournaments that continuously seat 3,500 players or more (yes, the total prize pool always exceeds their $150,000 guaranteed minimum). Their annual World Championship of Online Poker, just getting started for this year, is already breaking all of the records it itself set last year.
Also, in the non-online poker world, the World Series of Poker Main Event was nearly three times as large this year as it was last year; they had to break the first day of play up over three days, having 1/3 of the field play their first day each day. Only after that was the field small enough that they could fit everyone in the convention center used for the tournament at the same time.
All indications point towards poker still growing, and online poker is at least stable. Maybe if Party Gaming stock is losing value, it's for some other reason. If they are actually losign players, then maybe it's because their players are moving elsewhere.
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:3, Insightful)
Nowhere did i see they were losing money or even customers, only that new people weren't joining in droves as before. Not like some astronomical growth rate is gonna go on forever. Pretty sure
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:3, Interesting)
People do collude at "brick and mortar" poker tables as well.
Yeah, but word gets out pretty quickly who those people are, and they can't just change their name and gather that reputation back (actually, once they know you know, they won't pull it on you, and it can actually be an advantage). At B&M casinos you see the same people all the time. If you see a new face, 9 times out of 10 they're a fish. Sure, there's always that 1 time out of 10, so you've gotta be careful (I don't play no-limit), but
No Lack of Suckers (Score:2, Insightful)
It's not a question of losing ppl, it's a question of finding new ppl. Kind of like AOL - they can keep going forever, until the supply of n00bs runs out.
Eventually, they'll figure out how to wire ppl up, and then everyone who gets easily addicted to that sort of thing will die off, and evolution will move on.
--LWM
Re:No Lack of Suckers (Score:4, Funny)
people. It's three more characters, saving a mere 9 keystrokes out of the nearly 400 you already used to type that post.
Re:No Lack of Suckers (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:4, Insightful)
I still don't understand why online poker is so damn popular - any game where the odds can be calculated with any degree of accuracy is ideal fodder for bots, which can patiently calculate hands until the heat death of the universe. Unfortunately US gambling laws prevent Americans from using sports betting sites like http://www.betfair.com/ [betfair.com], which matches up bets between users, and though there are plenty of bots there they can't fleece people like poker bots because it's impossible to work out accurate odds for, say, Liverpool coming back from 3-0 down at half time to win the Champion's League.
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:5, Insightful)
That's such a minor thing in poker that it really doesn't make a difference. A good player can estimate the odds and probabilities in a few seconds close enough to matter for most hands, and within a minute or so in others. It's actually putting a percentage next to possible hands for the opponent that the bot can't do well at all, and will therefor always lose to a good human player. In no-limit games against good players that's much more true than in limit games against a mediocre crowd, mind you, since big blunders will cost the bot less, and "statistically correct" plays will win more often than not in a large group of average players.
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Lack of Suckers (Score:3, Interesting)
I would like to build a refinery here in CA. I'm not much of a chemist, but I know a good business when I see one -- and a market such as this is ripe for new competition. If I could actually do such a thing, I could actually lower the average gas price a Californian pays while also making craploads of money.
For a while, anyway.
For starters (Score:4, Funny)
Poker Poker Everywhere... (Score:4, Interesting)
Here in Houston, we have so many bars and lounges that host poker tournaments and the like, some of which have some very nice prizes for the winners, almost making the online world seem nowhere near as fun or productive. I am sure that everyone can explain to you what Texas Hold'em is by this time...
Looks like they need to find another fad to promote to the online community... and pray that TV doesn't steal the show once again...
Re:Poker Poker Everywhere... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Poker Poker Everywhere... (Score:2)
Don't forget the free booze, cheep hotel rooms, and hookers!
And if all else fails you can always eat the free bread at the resturant in the hotel lobby afterwards drinking water.
Re:Poker Poker Everywhere... (Score:2)
Maybe it's just this company (Score:5, Insightful)
For example, while PartyPoker is well known, PokerStars seems to be coming up fast. They advertise heavily on poker shows, moreso than PartyPoker it seems. Additionally, a visit to both sites generated a pop-up at PartyPoker on the opening page (yes, let's annoy potential clients), but not at PokerStars. I haven't tried the PartyPoker software in quite some time, but when it came time to choose I found PokerStars a more pleasant interface in which to waste time on play money games.
BUT, and this is very important, poker has been enjoying a popularity surge lately, especially Texas Hold-em. The number of poker shows on TV (even cable) a decade ago could have been counted on the fingers of one knee. Maybe there'd be something late night on ESPN 2, sandwiched in between Powder Puff BMX and Curling. Now you have poker shows on Travel channel, Bravo, InHD, and more. It's quite possible that, gasp, poker is a fad, and as more and more people realize they really suck at it, the fad is receding. Perhaps the money is going back to sports betting, going back to more traditional casino gaming (blackjack, roulette), or perhaps it's going to pay for $3 a gallon gasoline.
I definitely wouldn't take this article as an indicator of industry troubles as a whole, but it would be useful as a warning to watch for shifts in consumer gaming patterns across the industry.
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:2)
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:4, Informative)
ONLINE POKER IS BULLSHIT
I think playing against people you can't see, especially with most people playing free chips is bullshit. They have no concept of what they are betting. 90% of everyone out there who plays online absolutely destroys any advice you could get from a book. I don't do local free tournaments either. All of it destroys your ability to play for real money. I have a couple of friends qho still play online with real money. They do ok. But when they play with real people, they suck. Ever notice when you play online, almost every hand has someone sucking out? (sucking out is when someone with crappy cards stays in and wins when you had a great hand all along.)
Poker is great, but poker with live humans, cigar smoke and liquor is WAY WAY better. People are still playing, just not in a dark room alone.
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:3, Insightful)
Actually, one of the main reasons I play poker online is to AVOID the smoke
Re:Maybe it's just this company (Score:3, Insightful)
What does that mean? Play money tables are crap, agreed. You don't learn anything there and no one plays like that in real life. But real money tables are more real.
Ever notice when you play online, almost every hand has someone sucking out? (sucking out is when someone with crappy cards stays in and wins when you had a great hand all along.)
First, that may be true in play money tables. But generally
Parent is spot on. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because gambling is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Because gambling is ... (Score:2)
Re:Because gambling is ... (Score:2)
they just don't have any money left, and bots are taking the rest
Re:Because gambling is ... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can win more money from your opponents than the casinos rakes in on each hand, then you WILL make money at poker. There are plenty of people who make a living off of poker. I know of two friends who are paying their way through college with online poker (one still gets over half of the money from student loans). I dont make that much money, but I havent ever had a stretch of more than a couple days where I havent increased my money online.
You CAN make money from playing poker, it is not gambling in the sense that you can beat the system in poker. You just have to have some skill, and a bank roll big enough to absorb losses from a few bad beats.
Did people actually used to do that? (Score:2)
Never was stupid enough to play in the first place, actually.
Re:Did people actually used to do that? (Score:2)
Never was stupid enough to play in the first place, actually.
And why did you stop beating your wife?
Re:Did people actually used to do that? (Score:2)
Actually, for a short stint, I used to write gambling software. We had payout over time charts and mathemagical statistics charts that told us the amount of money that each game would return per hour and level of play.
I never play because I am not an idiot. As least not in that sense anyways.
Why have I stopped playing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because I'm not innumerate?
Re:Why have I stopped playing? (Score:2)
I think you mean: mu [jargon.net] :)
Re:Why is this a troll?!!! (Score:2)
Why is this a troll?
He is saying that "Because I am not unfamiliar with mathematical concepts and methods?" Thats a reasonable saying in the context of being familiar with gambling (btw the game with the highest chance of winning is craps if you ever studied that)
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=innumerat e [reference.com]
2 entries found for innumerate.
innumerate Audio pronunciation of "innumerate" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (-nmr-t, -ny-)
adj.
Unfamiliar with
Re:Why have I stopped playing? (Score:2)
I'm reminded of the simplified version of the laws of thermodynamics [physlink.com]: you can't win, you can't break even, and you can't quit the game. However, in the case of gambling, law #3 doesn't apply, since you can quit the game.
Most gamblers are in denial about the first two laws, which basically say that the casino comes out ahead but everybody else loses (on average). But some gamblers apparently get mod points, and don't want to hear that they're stoopid to blow
Re:Why have I stopped playing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why have I stopped playing? (Score:2)
I used to work with a "brainy type" who was also a gambling addict. He basically ruined his life with it. See my earlier comment about denial... it's easy to convince yourself that you can beat the game, but the odds are very, very slim that you'll even break even, no matter how "brainy" you are.
Re:Why have I stopped playing? (Score:3, Insightful)
Once again, this is not the case with poker. Smart players will make money on average. Of course they can still easily go broke by playing at stakes too high for their skill or bankroll.
Stacked Deck (Score:2)
World of Warcraft (Score:2, Funny)
Perhaps this has to do anything with it? (Score:2)
One Reason (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe because the regular players have gone broke?
Re:One Reason (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:One Reason (Score:4, Funny)
I never started playing. (Score:5, Insightful)
Plus, at home, I don't get scantily-clad babes serving me free drinks, and the infrequent comp from the casino host isn't a bad thing either.
Online gambling appeals to the pros, perhaps. Which is exactly why I don't want to play there. I'd rather be taken by the house at Blackjack in Vegas.. at least there I get to sit in a pretty building.
Re:I never started playing. (Score:2)
Re:I never started playing. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I never started playing. (Score:3, Funny)
"Trent, the beautiful babies don't work the midnight to six shift on a Wednesday. This is like the skank shift."
Mike
"Swingers"
I Only Gamble Inside Casinos (Score:5, Interesting)
There's just a different feeling going to a Casino vs gambling at home. All of the drinks are free (As in Beer, lots of beer!) and so ar the Cigars if you gamble long enough. Besides, online gambling to me at least has the Shady, can I really win at this because who's governing a small island in the pacific's website to make sure I even have a chance, vybe. Gambling inside casinos is the only place I want to Gamble. Besides, it woudl be too easy to get COmpletely addicted if I could plug in to the Internet and gamble my life away.
Re:I Only Gamble Inside Casinos (Score:2)
Re:I Only Gamble Inside Casinos (Score:2)
Re:I Only Gamble Inside Casinos (Score:2)
Gambling down? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's why it's down. I'm not talking about trusting your online casino of choice, or trusting that you will receive your money from your payment processor. I'm talking about trusting your fellow players.
The big money in online poker isn't from reading a book and playing off of statistics charts and pot odds. It's not in learning to read into your counterparts bets. It's in cheating.
Not the hack-the-server-to-see-everyone's-cards cheating, or reverse engineering their randomization algorithms. It's in playing 6 players on a 10-hand table and having everyone know what everyone else has.
The odds on your pocket jacks suddenly go way down once you know one of your other players has a jack. Also, you are able to control the table much more effectively with many people acting as one. Joe-sixpack might call you for $10 with his board pair, but he is much less likely if it's going to cost him $40. Also, when you know you have the winning cards, you can milk the rest of the players by raising once around the table and raising after your targets have called.
The game is entirely different and there are numerous other rulesets and strategies you can employ when you have more knowledge about the cards on the table than other people.
Sure, a "good" poker player can beat a bot or a statistical player any day of the week. However, the best player out there can't beat an entire table sharing information and playing for the same goal. Yes, the online casinos try and detect this collusion and generally the worst they do is ban players from playing together at the same table. I'm sure many Slashdoters can figure out how you get around any type of detection the casinos can through out.
I know I did.
Re:Gambling down? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone putting money into on
Re:Gambling down? (Score:2)
Even if you do manage to get by all the safety checks, you're still only at
Re:Gambling down? (Score:2)
If someone could actually get 6 hands in one table with communicating bots, he'd make a killing, and the online casino wouldn't have any useful way of catching someone technically skilled at it. However, it seems trivial for a busy casino to randomize things enough where you can't get multiple hands at the same table
Re:Gambling down? (Score:3, Informative)
it even has a link for Detection Avoidance [winholdem.net] advice.
from this article: [wired.com], one poker bot feature is Team Mode: Flick on Team mode and you can collude with other humans running WinHoldEm at the table.
Because I'm Always Buying (Score:2, Funny)
word to the wise (Score:2)
Gambling is similar, particularly with all those bots running around.
-Sean (OutdoorDB [outdoordb.org] - The Outdoor Wiki
SPYWARE (Score:4, Informative)
nothing to worry about (Score:3, Funny)
luckily, there is a permanent shortage of that in the world, so online gambling has a rosy future
Re:nothing to worry about (Score:4, Insightful)
luckily, there is a permanent shortage of that in the world, so online gambling has a rosy future
It's worth pointing out that poker, unlike blackjack or roulette where you play against the house, is purely against other players. The poker house takes a percentage called the 'rake'. You only have to be marginally above average to compensate for this. Competing players don't have unlimited pockets unlike a casino, also eliminating this advantage.
As for lacking intelligence, those that invest in real estate are similarly short sighted. Even more of a gamble as they have to make up for stamp duty and capital gains tax. And those that deal in stock and shares of currency dealings are equally foolish.
Your cliche may have held up a few of decades ago, when you took up a professions early in your teenage years and then were guaranteed the same job until your retirement, but in today's world learning to manage risk is a vital skill. Those that don't learn will hang on to your dogma but will then bemoan the fact that their (rapidly diminishing) state pension isn't enough to support them. Sorry to be blunt but being in the position myself I have to be honest. Online poker has taught me so much about risk management that my education failed to do. It's an important life skill.
Phillip.
Maybe it's the Robots? (Score:5, Interesting)
There was a story, what, a week ago(?) about how people are writing scripts and programs to play these online poker sites for real money, against real people... maybe people are just getting tired of getting owned by a small executable? I don't know, maybe not, but I'm sure that has something to do with it.
Oh, and school's starting up, so wannabe-pro college students don't have enough time anymore to play poker all day. Again, just speculation.
- dshaw
Trust, Trend and Truth (Score:5, Interesting)
Trend: Poker in particular is very trendy, and like all trends, it will pass, some will stay, but most will go.
Truth: At some point you will realize that you are not the next incarnation of Chris Moneymaker and never will be. No easy path for you to riches and fame. If you really love playing, you'll probably stick it out over the long term and may "make it" at some point, but most people today want the quick fix and lose interest if their fortunes don't come quick enough. That and the realization that it takes ALOT of time of your day if you are attempting to be "profitable" playing online. Again, think its an easy fix, then reality and truth set in.
And if you play "play money" games and freeroll tourneys, LOL, thats not real on so many levels.
Re:Trust, Trend and Truth (Score:2, Insightful)
That's why I mostly play multi-table tournaments. Players are assigned randomly to tens (sometimes hundreds) of tables. There's no way a colluding group can be big enough to have more than one or two players per table.
Could it be... bots? (Score:2)
Dunno. I still play on UltimateBet, and still win; but unless they combat the bot issue, they'll dry out. People want confidence they are playing other people, not against computer programs. It's already hard enough with Pokertracker, screen statistics overlays, etc; a full bot?
I wonder when the next wave will hit - when someone starts gaming the throng of bots by taking advantage of their decision making algorithm.
I stopped playing because... (Score:5, Funny)
Who stopped playing? (Score:5, Interesting)
People talk a lot about bots, but if they're out there, they suck. I play up to 2/4 limit Hold 'em, and 1-2 NL Hold 'em, as well as Omaha hi/lo, and I'm a consistent winner (I track every session I play). I play 6-8 hours a week, usually while the wife is watching dawson's creek, or some other equally girly dvd. We get to sit together, each doing something we enjoy, and I clear anywhere from $400 - $800 a month.
In short: people still play, decent players win, and (from what I've read), the bots are really, really bad.
Stock Market (Score:5, Informative)
The stock market is all about growth, not profit.
Have a compay that makes 100 billion trillion dollars a year?
Great, but next year you will have to make 200 billion trillion or else your stock will tank. Its not just about being profitable, stock is all about growth. If not you better pay one hell of a dividend.
Re:Stock Market (Score:2)
Not sure about the above. I don't know much about the stock market, but in principle, all profits increase the value of the stock. After all, the nominal (is that the word) value of a stock is the liquidated value of a company divided by the nu
Re:Stock Market (Score:3, Interesting)
When I look at stock prices, most of them seem to be overpriced, bid up by investors who have unrealistic expectations of future growth and profits. Everyone expects their horse to be the
It's a bad bet from the start (Score:3, Insightful)
Why have you stopped playing?
I never started - online gambling, that is. I live in North Carolina, where draconian laws prohibit gambling (even private poker games and sports pools - as our newspapers helpfully remind us every time a major sports tournament is upcoming). So I gamble when I travel, because I love to play blackjack and craps. I've won a little bit of money here and there over the years - $50-100 at a time, nothing major, and it's fun because I know how to play sensibly.
However, we do have one casino, of sorts, in NC - on the Cherokee reservation in the western part of the state. But I have never gone there and I never will, for the same reason I will never gamble online.
Because instead of standard table games - with real cards, actual dice, etc. - there are only computers and video-poker style games at Cherokee. And as much as I love technology, I don't trust it for gambling. At. All. There are just too many possibilities to manipulate the outcome.
Granted, anyone can learn to cheat at dealing cards; there are ways to make loaded dice and fixed slot machines (I don't play slots either). But the big, legal brick-and-mortar casinos around the country, with standard table games, have a bigger measure of responsibilty. You can still lose your ass playing there.
But those casinos depend on their reputations to survive; in my experience, if you think there's a problem or an inconsistancy with a game, you can have it addressed immediately and thoroughly.
Try that with a gaming website based on a Pacific island.
Not enough serious pro players (Score:5, Insightful)
Most people don't want to play poker for high stakes - they don't have the money to stay in the very high games, and they don't really want to loose it all in one game. They just want to play for the fun of it, and doing it with little drawn cartoon avatars isn't nearly as entertaining as doing it with your best buds.
Once the novelty wore off, those who actually want to play online poker are very few....
I don't gamble (Score:2)
I believe in personal freedom. However, I am constantly amazed that our country (USA) has legalized gambling when there are so many other "sins" still illegal that are much less harmful IMHO. (Marijuana, prostitution.)
Re:I don't gamble (Score:2)
Re:I don't gamble (Score:3, Informative)
It would be ironic ... (Score:4, Funny)
Poker is more fun... (Score:2)
Mmmmm... let me think this through.... (Score:2)
I've been playing 2 years (Score:5, Interesting)
Vice of the moment... (Score:2)
It's a fad. Fad's decline by definition.
Is accountability partially at fault? (Score:2)
Do they rig their games?
Do they hire people for a comparitively paltry sum to use as photo models for the "See our lucky winners!" pages, so they can drum up new business?
Since so many pay and free casinos make their income by advertising (much of which comes from pay casinos), it's basically turning into another "pay per click" crash and burn.
And of course, there's the user base, which makes it almost impossible to win legitimately, since you're talki
Fairness? (Score:2)
82% Revanue Growth (Score:2, Informative)
"Why have you stopped playing?" (Score:3, Funny)
Two words, bots and spam (Score:3, Insightful)
Wil Weaton and Poker alienation (Score:3, Informative)
And yes, the poker comment spam is out of control. It's all driven by botnets. My blogs periodically get hit by these crapfloods, and you see the exact same comment or trackback sent to 25 posts from 20 different IP addresses in a couple minutes. Not hard to figure out ... just a pain to defend and clean up.
Because... (Score:5, Insightful)
I could see possibly playing a $5 tournament or two online on a down night, but for the most part I'd really rather go hang out with real human beings. And as an added bonus, when you play an offline tournament you don't have to deal with the prepubescent dweebies that seem to hang out on the online poker rooms.
Maybe the suckers realized.... (Score:2)
Of course this is difficult to do with computer poker but then I guess this can be modified to:
If you join a computer poker game and you are not a bot, then you are the human that is about to lose really bad.
I don't trust online gambling (Score:2)
Not on the downturn yet (Score:2)
But what about the fact that Party often has over 70,000 players online at once? What about the fact that the World Series of Poker had over 5600 entrants, over 2 times the number of entrants the year before. How about the fact that Pokerstars is currently running the World Championship of Online Poker, and getting 3000+
Why I stopped... (Score:3, Insightful)
Drop in stock price != fewer people playing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I wont believe it's true! (Score:2)
Re:Play $$$ (Score:2)
Ok, here's some insight for you. People who play poker to win absolutely love the type of player you describe. The mere 10% of poker players who really can be profitable long term don't make their profit playing each other. They make it off people who like to gamble. A properly bankrolled player will take a 60% shot to double their money over and over and over again and never be bitter when the sucker hits his 40% chance to come from behind and take the pot. They have a special n
Re:I don't play at all because (Score:2)