Post
Topic
Board Gambling discussion
Re: Do you have a habit of tracking your gambling progress?
by
Makus
on 06/11/2024, 08:18:29 UTC
Do you have a habit of tracking your gambling progress?

I always track my profit/loss per month to analyze what’s additional profit/loss to my overall finances but I don’t track my overall gambling history since this is very hard to maintain especially on my case that I have an indefinite schedule on gambling on multiple casino.

I’m not sure either if tracking is still advisable while most of the casino already have loyalty page to track your total wager volume and stats on your casino account. It will be very painful to track progress if you are frequently losing than winning. This might ignite too a more chasing losses in the future so I really suggest to don’t do it in regular basis.

This is actually a good way to know if you are in profit of loss. There's a short football game I used to play on 1x bet and at the end of every month I would do a little check and balance to see if I made profit that month. If you are into any type of gambling, be it casinos or sports betting always check if you are in profit, if your losses are higher then you can make a change or try a different approach. In casino games if your wins are higher than your losses wouldn't your account be banned? I ask myself this question because as an active gambler into casino games there's no way you can be in profit.


as gamblers luck is not always on our side, and that's the reason we encounter several losses even more than the wins yet we continue gambling because gamble isn't all about making money, there are times when you gamble for the sake of fun. chasing continuous wins or trying to always be profitable will eventually lead you to addiction and irresponsible gambling. the system wasn't designed for the casino to go bankrupt off paying gamblers, the difficulty in the system isn't set for a 50:50 no matter how hard we gamble the house is always on the winning side. however, we must check our bet history to know if we should take a break or reduce our stakes so we don't regret it in the future.