I have just one small amendment to offer
Unlike the race track, where you bet against the other gamblers, when you are at a casino you are playing against the house. The house always has the odds tipped in their favor, so in the long run you will lose and they will win.
This is true except for the following:
In Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA, I was shown a casino that hosted poker games. All day, all night. It was not a special event and was not a demonstration by experts or celebrities to amuse and amaze an audience.
There was a set fee, perhaps $10 per one-half hour, I honestly don't know. But you played, not against the house but against other players. All the normal statistics of poker applied;
there was no house edge and no player had an edge. Normally the house did not supply a player. It is possible they might provide a player to keep a table going if player-count dwindled. That player would probably be the same person who collected the house fee and acted as Sergeant-at-Arms in case players got nasty or rowdy. I cannot confirm that the house did supply a player. I did not personally see that. The only profit to the house would be to preserve the 'ambience' of people enjoying poker. A magnet for more players, if you will. While a few people like my friend came only to play poker, most players were heavy-duty betters who were "cooling off" from blackjack or craps*. But it makes some sense because EVERYTHING about a casino is purposed to keep people there to enjoy themselves and lose more money. Casinos are a business -- no need to reiterate that.
*The minor character played by PHILIP SEYMOUR HOFFMAN certainly appeared to need a poker hand or two to chill out.
When it came to picking the killer ,, ,,, you picked the wrong guy.
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