Quote:
Originally Posted by Mason Malmuth
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It turns out that in games like poker which are grounded in statistical theory (that includes probability theory) there are two parameters that drive the success of the games: The success (or lack of it) of the best players, and much of the enjoyment of the recreational players who, while losers in the long run, will still come back to play again and again. These parameters are luck and skill. And both are required in the right proportions for poker games to be successful in the long run.
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This is true. But how the skill and luck are proportioned depend entirely on the type of players and the community where players come from.
I played in the 20/40 LHE at Foxwoods for a number of years. The game was basically one of the best in the country. There were roughly 200 players who were regulars and almost nobody came to play as a newcomer. New players were either players who were moving up from 10/20 LHE or were people who moved into the northeast and were regulars somewhere else.
The luck and skill balance was great. The game was hyper aggressive. I would estimate that about 25% of the players were winners over time. The factor that kept the fish coming was that they would win big now and then and also that some were business owners, lawyers, doctors, etc. and had money to burn.
Then Black Friday happened. And some online professionals who played 4 to 10 tables at once online descended. Luck was no longer a factor. The fish couldn't win ever. The skill level of the online pros was so high that the winning regulars at FW could no longer win over time. At least most of us. I became a fish. Within a year the number of tables dropped from 4 to 7 over the weekends to 1 or 2.
As a result I play NL tournament poker mostly. When I go to Foxwoods I look to see if the 20/40 LHE game is running and now after Covid it basically isn't even on weekends.
Another factor that should be considered is that aside from luck and skill most rooms have some kind of jackpot situations going. Many of the older retired players who are regulars come and play because they get casino points so they can eat for free and they look forward to possibly winning the bad beat jackpots or high hand contests. So poker in this sense is more like slot machines for the lower end (like 1/2 NL or 3/6 LHE). They are going to lose over time but its a way to spend their days and to possibly win a jackpot.