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I want to start out by telling you who this article is about, or rather, who it is not about. The Professional Gambler is not the flamboyant player you see making a lot of noise and calling attention to himself. He, or she, will not be the player making the extravagant high-roller bets. No, the real pro is a quiet, reserved, serious player. The professional gambler knows that to stay ahead, it is necessary to treat gambling as a business; a profitable business. The professional gambler does not "go out for a night (or day) of gambling." You see, the pro would never assume that he or she would be out playing all night. In fact, the pro will usually know within the first 30 minutes of play whether to keep playing or to call it a day. When a professional gambler goes to play, it is with the specific intent to win, not to entertain himself and others. This is work. This is a job. You see, there is no way to determine how long it will take to either win enough (or lose enough), but the pro will know when either one of those limits is reached and will have the discipline to recognize it and act accordingly. You may have on occasion, played next to the professional. No, you probably would not remember it. There is nothing to really call attention to the professional player except for the fact that he gets ahead and then quits! He doesn't hang out and continue playing because he or she is "out for a night of gambling." If professional gamblers want to be entertained, they go see a show or a movie. Gambling is not an "activity" like so many tourists look upon it. You go to Vegas or Atlantic City and you gamble all night. That is what the recreational gambler will do. They find it very easy to rationalize...something like this; "Well I played all night and it only cost me $200. That is not so bad for a night of entertainment with free drinks." This is the tourist mentality. Oh sure, you might hear stories of how someone went to Vegas and won thousands. It can happen. But more than likely you hear the all too familiar account that goes something 노노노노노노 like this: "I was up 3 or 4 hundred but I lost it all back." You will never hear a professional make a claim like that. If one is gambling to make a profit, then they will recognize that 3 or 4 hundred is a very healthy profit and will be long gone. The professional gambler is a guerrilla fighter. They are not there for a marathon playing spree. Once again, the pro is there to win. Winning or losing usually doesn't take that much time, certainly not all day or night. Sure, they might catch a winning streak and believe me; the pro will recognize it and ride it to the end. But more times than not, the play of a pro will last only long enough to make the days profit or to lose the max for that day. When a professional wins big, there is no chance that the casino will ever see that money again. The pro is much too smart to give the casino that chance. As far as systems go, the professional is also too smart to think that there is really a system that can consistently beat the casinos no matter what game you are playing. Instead, the professional gambler will use proven strategies and betting methods to enhance his or her chances of winning. Very few decisions will actually be made at the time of play. Most of the pro's decisions are made before they approach the game. They will stick with their basic strategies and betting methods or progressions. You will not see a pro ever "chase his money." A pro can, and will, accept the occasional loss. It happens. I like to compare the professional gambler to a salesperson that works strictly on commission. There will be days when you will make no money or even lose money if you take into account travel expenses, etc... The professional gambler instead, learns to look at the cumulative total of play. It is not "how much did I win or lose today?" but more like, "how much am I ahead for the month or year?" I'd like to add a word here about professional poker players. They are in a class by themselves! In fact, some poker players do not consider themselves as gamblers. These players contend that poker is a game of skill and that they
are very skillful. All that I have written above does not really apply to the professional poker player. I will probably, in the next few months, write an article about them. A very interesting breed, indeed! The most famous Zig Zag Method is the most widely used strategy that people use today in search of loose slot machines. It is unknown why it became known as the Zig Zag Method. Possible because the player Zigs and Zags back and forth through the casino looking for a casino that someone is just stopping there play after not winning any and in an ideal situation they have been losing on that same machine for several hours. Either way, the Zig Zag Method has no scientific evidence to back up those claims. As the Zig Zag method goes, the player is looking for patterns on the slots. For one example, imagine that bananas are a jackpot slot. The Zig Zag method player goes through the casino looking for a slot with the correct set of bananas on the slot reels. If three bananas are on the payline and a third banana is one line off the payline, this is an example of the Zig Zag theory. In theory the slot reels are getting ready to line up and you could soon hit a huge jackpot. In today's times however, slots now use what is called a random number generators or an (RNG). These random number generators are internal pc's which add up the probabilities and then determine what symbols to display for each of the slot reels. Every time you place your bet and pull the handle on a slot machine a random number generator determines the positions of the slot machine's symbols on the reels. This lets us know that all spins on a slot machine is independent and on it's own of any other pulls from a slot machine. The random number generator (RNG) makes each and every spin random. Now you see that that is why that they call it random. There is a pretty widely-known theory that the casino staff place the "loosest" slot machines closer to the entrance and exits of the casino. Slot machine gamblers going in the casino see other gamblers winning at these slots and decide they want to play. With this theory, slots players should always try the slots near the entrance doors and exit doors of the casino, these may be the loosest slot machines on the casino property. Another version of this system is that the casino will put loose slots in a high traffic spot. An example would be, close to the cashiers, and the restrooms and of course near the ATM machine, and close to a casino gaming table. Maybe in lieu of gambling at the slots close to the front door, you should play a machine where casino traffic is very heavy. This theory can have a flaw, the theory that I am talking about is the "hit frequency". The hit ratio is the percentage of slot machine spins a slot machine pays off instead of taking your money. It's like this, one slot machine might have a higher hit frequency, but another machine might have fewer hits (wins,payout), but pay off more when these hits take place. The casino staff may put a slot with a high hit frequency rate near an entrance or exit door or any other high traffic area, like the bar or the ATM machine. That does not mean the machine is paying off more than machines in some of the other areas of the casino. In all truthfulness, it could be the total opposite. Casinos are not in business to just give away free money, they are constantly coming up with new ways to get these type of results Do not always expect to see the loose slots near the front door of the casino. Trust me when I say that the casino staffers know all about these tales. In my experience, the casino puts the slot machines with the smaller payback percentages where slot players may be more likely to anchor down and play.