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The Lie at the Heart of Poker Games


Addiction to online poker games is a genuine problem, especially amongst young people in college today. Poker games are fun and offer the potential to win money, and now, thanks to easy access to the Internet, they are readily available to any seeker. The presence of such easily accessible poker games has sped up the normal pattern of gambling addiction that has been seen and diagnosed for years. Instead of men of their 30’s or 40’s building up to a climactic terrible turn of events after a decade or so filled with poker games, now, men and women in their early twenties or even late teens are losing themselves to endless tides of poker games.

As reported in the New York Times article, “the Hold-’Em Holdup,” in June of 2006, there are any number of young individuals who have the same kind of terrible, life-shattering addiction that one would have only previously expected to see after years of playing poker games in smoky, poorly lit rooms. Greg Hogan, Jr., a 19-year-old sophomore at Lehigh University, wound up attempting a bank robbery on a spur of the moment whim, in order to pay back debts he had incurred from his numerous online poker games. Alex Alkula, a 19-year-old, decided to drop out of the Art Institute of Pittsburgh in order to make his fame and fortune playing poker games, and instead found himself barely scraping by, sleeping on friends’ couches.

The nature of poker games is that they are addictive and deceiving, or otherwise they wouldn’t be so effective at generating money for either the numerous sites that employ them, or for the casinos that feature them. Players need to win often enough and large enough that they believe they have a shot of making a lot of money, only to find out too late that the more poker games they play, the less likely they are to have actually come out ahead. Online poker games magnify the problem tenfold; gone are the pauses in between games for shuffling, or any of the other numerous physical actions that might cause a temporary lapse in game play. Instead, the poker games function quickly, easily, automatically, with very little hiccup between each one, allowing a player to go through dozens of games with ease, even playing multiple poker games at the same time.

The fact that the poker game system in generally depends upon individuals who either don’t have the skill to realize that they don’t have much skill, or who don’t mind consistent losses, leads one to question the ethics of the entire affair. Essentially, for all that poker games are entertaining and fun, their long-running sustainability is based on a con, a deception. About 1 in 10 of those who consistently play poker games will actually succeed at making money in the long run, and poker games function by feeding off the hope of those who believe that they will successfully be that one in ten. In the end, the danger of poker games has always been present, but it has never reached such a height as it has now, with the advent of online poker games. It seems that the only way to curb the growing danger of the games is to take action of a different form, to educate individuals about the reality of poker games, online or otherwise. Knowledge is the key to defeating deception, like that which is inherent to the functioning of poker games; while poker games need not be abolished at all, players should be made aware of the dangers in pursuing these fleeting entertainments too vehemently.

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Free Poker Really Isn’t


Free poker online has been cropping up more and more with the advent of the Internet, and it’s led to some unexpected consequences. It’s easy to overlook gambling addiction as having existed previous to the advent of free poker online, but never before had gambling been so easily accessible for so many people, and never had it been more costly than with the free poker being offered by so many websites. Free poker seems innocuous enough, if for no other reason than because it’s free. If you don’t input your credit card information, then there would seem to be no danger to online poker. But free poker acts, in a way, as a gateway drug, teaching players all the behaviors necessary to get them started on a terrible addiction.

Essentially, the very nature of free online poker is designed at conversion to full-fledged, paid poker, as is exemplified in so many similar poker tournament strategies. Having great prizes, great offers, and ease of access are all designed to lure the online poker player from playing free poker to playing with higher stakes. True, a lot of paid online poker is illegal, thus making free poker one of the only available ways to spread poker amongst players in America. But this doesn’t stop paid poker sites from extending offers to those who have already come to play and enjoy free poker online. Essentially, it is as if someone were coming to tell a player that a game he has played a great deal of, and believes he has become proficient at, will suddenly start paying him money back for playing, if only he’ll risk a bit of his own money first.

As an example, PokerStars.net claims to be the best source of free poker online that is out there on the Internet. It’s one of the top hits when one searches for free poker online on a search engine. The website proclaims consistently that it offers free poker, along with free poker advice and the like. But a bit more examination makes it clear that the poker offered at PokerStars.net is not free, not by a long shot. It seems that because way because technically, you are spending money in order to buy online chips in a PokerStars.net game. You are not directly spending your money within the games offered by PokerStars.net; you are instead purchasing a false currency which you can use to play PokerStars.net games. The fees may not even be terribly large, but they are still there, and they are still costing players something. But, on the other hand, they are offering a return to players of actual money.

Free poker online can offer a good, fun way to while away some time, without losing money, when it is used moderately. The problem arises with the fact that free poker online is used as a way of luring players in to games where they have the potential to earn actual money. After a player considers himself skilled or trained from having played free poker for a while, that player may then decide to risk some money on paid poker online. If the player wins, then he will think all that free poker has transformed him into a good poker player, and he will continue to play. Sometimes, this works out, and the player actually does have the necessary skill and talent to become successful at paid poker. But far too many times, players who think they have the potential to become the next poker champion wind up losing vast sums of money to the debt they accrue in paid poker games.