Casino Streaming: The Industry of Lies: Why Watching Kills Personality Faster Than a Real Game
Hello everyone. If you were looking for another article about "responsible gambling" or sweet fairy tales about how to win a million, close the tab. Today we will talk tough. I have been in the gambling industry for 17 years. I have gone from poker and my own business to tough gambling addiction in slots. I was one of the first to start streaming casinos at all when Twitch was just appearing and no one knew about it yet. I know this kitchen from both sides of the screen.
And my verdict is unequivocal: watching casino streams is the worst thing you can do for your personality and wallet. It's not just entertainment, it's a mental trap that turns you into an emotional impotent.
Let's break down the facts of why you should unfollow all streamers right now.
1. Industry of Lies: Candy Wrappers vs. Reality
The first thing to learn is what you see on the screen of top streamers like Roshtein or Drake is show business, not gambling. Take, for example, top Western streamers like Roshtein. They make great content, sit on the air 24/7, but why? Because, by and large, they don't care about the result. They often play on special conditions or on candy wrappers, they do not risk their well-being. This is just a beautiful picture for the viewer.
The real game looks different. When a streamer gambles with his hard-earned money (as we did at the dawn of the industry), it's a hell of a stress.
- When you lose real money on a stream, you hate the whole world.
- You want to "jump out the window" out of despair.
- You don't smile and don't yell with joy, you sit in the deepest depression.
The viewer sees the façade. You think, "Wow, how easy!" But behind the beautiful picture there are either fake balances or broken nerves of those who really smeared themselves.
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2. The "Emotional Cuckold" Effect: Movement with no result
Why do I think watching streams is more harmful than the game itself? Because it is a surrogate. When you watch another person spin slots, you experience someone else's emotions. You get a dopamine hit, but in your real life, absolutely nothing changes. This, pardon the comparison, is like "putting half a bump and not cumming". There is movement, but there is no result.
Compare the two scenarios:
- You play for yourself: you make a choice and are responsible for it. If you lost the last 100 thousand rubles that you needed for rent, you are shocked. But this is stress that makes you move! Your brain begins to work 300%, like under the NZT pill from the movie "Areas of Darkness". You look for a way out, come up with schemes, work. Ludka can be a powerful incentive for growth in business, Because you are sorting out the consequences of your decisions.
- You're watching a stream: You're sitting on the couch, experiencing euphoria from someone else's skid, but your problems remain with you. You're just burning time and degrading.
3. A direct road to addiction
Don't be fooled into thinking you're just "looking for fun." Watching streams for a long time inevitably leads to problems.
The mechanics are simple:
- You watch for a week, two.
- Your brain gets used to easy wins on the screen.
- You want to experience it yourself, to "complete the gestalt".
- As a result, 80-90% of the audience tries to repeat what they saw.
Only when you go repeat, you won't have a contract with the casino and an infinite balance. You will go to pour your real money, getting hooked on the emotions that were sold to you through the screen.
4. The hypocrisy of society: Who is really to blame?
Now it is fashionable to hate streamers. Write comments like: "You advertise evil, I lost everything because of you!" Do you know what I'm going to say? This is the lot of the weak. Shifting responsibility to the streamer is the position of infantile people. A person makes his own choice. If you watched a stream and went to lose, this is your choice, your risk and your responsibility.
We live in a thoroughly hypocritical world.
- The government demands taxes while the elites avoid payments.
- Society is screaming that casinos are evil, but look at the children. Roblox, skins in CS:GO, loot boxes in games are pure casinos built into children's games. Gamification of gambling is now everywhere, in every store.
Streaming is a business. Popular streamers (CasinoDaddy, xQc, Trainwreckstv) make money. And if someone got "smeared" because of them, then this person would find a way to lose without streaming. He would just as well buy heroin if he was offered.
Summary: What to do?
I'm not condoning streamers, but I'm not going to judge them either. That's their life. But I give you advice based on 17 years of experience and observation:
- Stop watching streams. This is degradation and a psychological trap.
- Don't listen to the crowd. Society is a mass that does not know what it needs. Listening to the opinion of "leftist" people means always being in the ass.
- Live your life. Do you want to tin? Take responsibility yourself. Get real experience, not a surrogate through the monitor screen.
Casino streams are fast food for the brain, which only makes you sick. It is better to do something real.
As for the fact that gambling addiction is an incentive for business. I confirm. I opened my first store stupidly to pay off gambling debts. When collectors call, the brain really generates ideas like crazy. But I don't advise you to repeat it, well, he's with such stress.
LOL. I read the article and see an offended babies. "Streaming is an industry of lies." No one gives a fuck! We come for emotions, for the show. What difference does it make if they are candy wrappers or not? It's like watching a movie. You're not yelling at the movie theater that Spider-Man isn't real, are you?
The difference is that in the movies you are not encouraged to throw money into a scam. And streamers sell you false hope. You will see how "easily" they win, and you will go to drain your hard-earned money. The mechanics are simple, the author is 100% right here.
+1
Author, of course, you are an insider and all that, but the advice "go play yourself" is fucking harmful advice.
In fact, the calm sit, watch how the uncle raises the money (that are not there), and rejoice. Vital.