I decided to create this topic as a tip to fellow gambler that wants to have a
slightly increase chance to win on gambling.
Fella should know when to ride when you are on a win streak. You can test the water first by betting slowly until you get the tempo of winning streak then slowly increase your bet while you are still winning. Stop immediately when you encounter a lose or two because there’s a high chance that you will be tilted and chase loss until you lose everything.
Don’t increase your bet when you are losing because it will just amplify your loss immediately once you are in bad streak. Always test the water before you increase your bet.

Great!
Many people think that they should do exactly the opposite... never stop playing while they are losing, under the pretext that they need to recover the lost money.
Even worse is when these people use "unbeatable techniques" like the Martingale which in theory should mean that the bettor never loses money... big mistake.
However, I would just like to add to your OP that even during a winning streak you need to stop playing, because depending on the style of play and bet you are making, it is possible to lose in just two moves what was won in 10 or more past plays.
If it is "not possible" to stop playing, then you should at least reduce the amount, returning to the initial contributions, making a reserve of what has already been won.
Everyone has the pattern of gambling that works for them so we don't have to do copy and paste but rather we can try other patterns if they will work for us. Whatever thing we are doing that does not work for us, we better stop it and look for how we can adjust to suit our gambling winnings.
Most mistakes I do avoid is to wanna copy pro traders that had been in the gambling for very long time. This alone can affect us mentally if the pattern we want to copy from them looks different as difficult for us to handle. Their should be a way for us to guage whatever we are doing so that we don't ride too fast to the extend of creating loses for ourselves.