Antiquehunter
Degenerate Gambler
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2005
- Messages
- 5,088
Maybe I'm being obtuse...
I interpreted the OP as being a very specific situation, with a very specific testable hypothesis.
- I do not win my 'fair share' of pair vs 2 overs in texas hold'em when all-in preflop. I've tracked 54 hands, and I have won less than 27 of them, indeed, 21 - so that makes me 'unlucky' in showdowns as described.
So - I here, proposed some ways to test that hypothesis, which have been rejected because they're not 'In the game scenario'. I don't understand why that is relevant because the event as described is not influenced by any player skill. It is absolutely purely testing to see whether or not in real life, one realizes the mathematical expectation.
As such, I agree that perhaps this is turning into a test of something 'other' - ie that someone can be imbued with 'luck' (or 'unluck') that would affect them in various ways.
As regards the definition as posted:
I simply am not part of the 'some' group that attributes this to reasons of faith or superstition. I agree that Luck or fortuity is good or bad fortune in life, caused by accident or chance. (Depending on definition of 'accident' or 'chance')
Its just that in gaming, we can quantify how big that accident or chance may be. We know for example, that on a two zero roulette wheel, the odds of a specific number from hitting on the very next spin to be 1:38. For which I will be paid off 35 to 1, creating a house edge of 5.26%.
If I walk up to a roulette wheel and stick $5 on 32 red (I personally would not) and it just so happens that the little ball falls into the 32 slot, I can take my $175 win, whistle away and have a nice steak & a bottle of wine, feeling 'lucky'. Its a slimy word, because really, you had no business making the bet in the first place, knowing that its a pretty unlikely circumstance, and that you're really just handing 25 cents to the casino management, win or lose. If I lose this example, I don't really have any business to feel 'unlucky' because it was a pretty unlikely outcome anyways. If I sit there and play red 32 100 times in a row at $5 a pop, and lose all 100 throws, I probably will feel very unlucky (and probably kick myself at wasting $500) - but have I? No. It is certainly within the realms of mathematical probability for a number not to show itself over 100 spins on a standard 38 number roulette wheel.
Which is my point on the OP. So he's 6 hands below the expected outcome (which is an estimate at best) over a small sample of 54 attempts. Meaningless. He might be feeling a little beaten up about it, but this is by no means evidence of being 'unlucky' - as defined by 'Gargamel has cursed me that I shall always be just slightly below expectation when playing a very specific type of hand at hold'em'
I interpreted the OP as being a very specific situation, with a very specific testable hypothesis.
- I do not win my 'fair share' of pair vs 2 overs in texas hold'em when all-in preflop. I've tracked 54 hands, and I have won less than 27 of them, indeed, 21 - so that makes me 'unlucky' in showdowns as described.
So - I here, proposed some ways to test that hypothesis, which have been rejected because they're not 'In the game scenario'. I don't understand why that is relevant because the event as described is not influenced by any player skill. It is absolutely purely testing to see whether or not in real life, one realizes the mathematical expectation.
As such, I agree that perhaps this is turning into a test of something 'other' - ie that someone can be imbued with 'luck' (or 'unluck') that would affect them in various ways.
As regards the definition as posted:
Wiki Luck or fortuity is good or bad fortune in life caused by accident or chance, and attributed by some to reasons of faith or superstition, which happens beyond a person's control.
I simply am not part of the 'some' group that attributes this to reasons of faith or superstition. I agree that Luck or fortuity is good or bad fortune in life, caused by accident or chance. (Depending on definition of 'accident' or 'chance')
Its just that in gaming, we can quantify how big that accident or chance may be. We know for example, that on a two zero roulette wheel, the odds of a specific number from hitting on the very next spin to be 1:38. For which I will be paid off 35 to 1, creating a house edge of 5.26%.
If I walk up to a roulette wheel and stick $5 on 32 red (I personally would not) and it just so happens that the little ball falls into the 32 slot, I can take my $175 win, whistle away and have a nice steak & a bottle of wine, feeling 'lucky'. Its a slimy word, because really, you had no business making the bet in the first place, knowing that its a pretty unlikely circumstance, and that you're really just handing 25 cents to the casino management, win or lose. If I lose this example, I don't really have any business to feel 'unlucky' because it was a pretty unlikely outcome anyways. If I sit there and play red 32 100 times in a row at $5 a pop, and lose all 100 throws, I probably will feel very unlucky (and probably kick myself at wasting $500) - but have I? No. It is certainly within the realms of mathematical probability for a number not to show itself over 100 spins on a standard 38 number roulette wheel.
Which is my point on the OP. So he's 6 hands below the expected outcome (which is an estimate at best) over a small sample of 54 attempts. Meaningless. He might be feeling a little beaten up about it, but this is by no means evidence of being 'unlucky' - as defined by 'Gargamel has cursed me that I shall always be just slightly below expectation when playing a very specific type of hand at hold'em'
