Post
Topic
Board Gambling discussion
Re: Gambling not trust worthy
by
swogerino
on 08/07/2025, 06:56:11 UTC
One of the things that I have seen that people should not trust is gambling because gambling is one thing that has done more harm than good by my assessment because looking at the winning percentage compared to those who lose it's worth not it because the winning percentage is two over hundreds which is charactarized by luck and chance so the next time you think about gambling know that you are going against thousands of people who are also looking for a way that they can get lucky in trying to win just like you so please gambling is not worth it don't kill yourself anymore trying to win anymore.

You should have focus your post at people who treat gambling as a source of income, because there are people that only gamble for entertainment rather than a primary source of income, and they're enjoying it. Most gamblers rely to use gambling to solve financial solutions, which will lead them to harm or regret because they will end up chasing losses instead of doing it for fun, and that is why most gambling sites advise gamblers to gamble responsibly because if you don't, the chances of losing will be higher than winnings, which might lead to gambling addiction, always gamble with what you can afford to lose and avoid chasing losses.

People playing for entertaining purposes only, who are they as if someone wanted to play for entertainment purposes only they go to the official providers of the games like Hackswaw, Pragmatic and others and try their entertainment for free there. The truth is that even people who start to play just for fun in the heat of the game they can be sucked in it and in the rage they can start chasing lost amounts of money. The problem is that you can never trust your insticts while gambling as most likely you will be drown in the gambling abyss from where it is very difficult to come out once you deep dive into it. Bottom line is even if you start for fun there is no guarantee you will not be sucked into depositing a lot more money than expected.