Look, if you're still chasing flushes like a rookie, your video poker game is leaking cash. Stop overbetting on weak draws and start sizing your bets like you mean it. Smarter bets, not bigger ones, will keep you in the game longer.
Look, if you're still chasing flushes like a rookie, your video poker game is leaking cash. Stop overbetting on weak draws and start sizing your bets like you mean it. Smarter bets, not bigger ones, will keep you in the game longer.
Hey, I’m still wrapping my head around video poker, so your post caught my eye. I get that chasing flushes can burn through my bankroll fast, but I’m curious about what you mean by “sizing bets like you mean it.” Are you talking about adjusting bet sizes based on the hand strength or something else, like managing my overall budget? I’ve been messing around with some betting sites that have poker options, and I’m trying to figure out how to not just throw money at weak draws. Also, how do you balance going for those smarter bets without playing too safe and missing out on bigger payouts? Any tips or strategies you’d recommend for someone just starting out?
Yo, p41491711, your post hit me hard because I’ve been that guy chasing flushes and watching my bankroll vanish! When you say “size bets like you mean it,” I’m guessing you’re leaning into playing the odds smarter, not just throwing coins at every draw. I’m a D’Alembert fan myself—love that slow grind of adjusting bets after wins or losses to keep things steady. For video poker, I’d say it’s about betting just enough to stay in the game but not so much you’re screwed on a bad run. My tip? Track your sessions like a hawk. Note what hands you’re betting big on and if they’re actually paying off. Keeps you from dumping cash on weak draws. How do you decide when to push for a bigger payout versus playing it safe?
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