Yo, your skeleton betting angle’s wild—never thought I’d see that crossover with video poker, but it kinda makes sense. Controlled aggression’s the name of the game, no matter what you’re betting on. Splitting the bankroll into units like that is tight, keeps you from blowing it all when the adrenaline hits. I respect the grind, but I’m coming from a different court—tennis, specifically those Grand Slam showdowns. Same vibe, though: pace it right, or you’re toast.
I’m all about carving my cash into chunks too—usually five units per tournament. Say I’ve got a grand, that’s $200 per session, max two bets a day. If I drop two units, I’m out, no chasing some Djokovic upset that ain’t happening. On a hot streak—like when I called Alcaraz over Sinner in straight sets last Wimbledon—I’ll skim a third of the winnings and stash it. Lets me keep swinging without risking the rent. Your lock-away trick’s solid; I might jack that for my next Roland Garros run.
That 9/6 Jacks or Better machine you’re on is a goldmine—99.54% is no joke if you’re playing sharp. I do the same hunt for value in tennis odds. Found a site last season with soft lines on five-setters, and digging into player stats—first-serve percentage, break point conversions—gave me an edge. It’s not sexy, but it’s like reading a serve: spot the pattern, cash in. Your session-tracking idea’s interesting, but I’m already neck-deep in spreadsheets for matches—win percentages, court surface splits, even head-to-heads. Adding poker logs might make my brain fry.
Curious if you ever scout for overlays in your poker spots like I do with bookies. Finding those mispriced bets—say, an underdog with a hot streak—feels like hitting a royal flush. What’s your move when the table’s running cold? You stick to your stop-loss or switch machines? Always looking to swipe a trick or two for my next set.