• Home
  • Archived Blogs
    • James Grosjean (AP)
      • About James Grosjean
      • View all posts
    • Bob Dancer (Video Poker)
      • About Bob Dancer
      • View all posts
      • Video Poker Classes
    • Richard Munchkin (AP)
      • About Richard Munchkin
      • View all posts
    • Lou Antonius
      • About Dr. Lou Antonius
      • View all posts
    • Blair Rodman (Poker)
      • About Blair Rodman
      • View all posts
    • FrankB (Sports)
      • About FrankB
      • View all posts
    • Jack Andrews (Sports)
      • About Jack Andrews
      • View all posts
    • Jimmy Jazz (AP)
      • View all posts
    • Anthony Curtis
      • About Anthony Curtis
      • View all posts
    • Guest Bloggers
    • Podcast
  • The Games
    • Bingo Rooms
    • Blackjack
    • Keno Rooms
    • Poker Rooms
    • Video Poker
      • Best Video Poker
      • Bob Dancer Articles
      • Game Room
    • Sports Betting Books
  • Shop
    • Blackjack Strategy
    • Casino Comps & Promotions
    • Casino-Game Strategy Cards
    • Game Protection
    • James Grosjean Strategy Cards (ShopLVA Exclusive)
    • GWAE-Author Products
    • Las Vegas Advisor Membership + Member Rewards
    • Poker-Strategy
    • Sports Betting & Daily Fantasy
    • Tournament Play
    • Video Poker Strategy
  • Arnold Snyder’s Blackjack Forum Online
  • LVA Home
  • Home
  • Video Poker
  • My Best Plays

My Best Plays

April 30, 2013 Leave a Comment Written by Bob Dancer

I’ve mentioned several times that I enjoy reading the posts at www.richardmunchkin.com. Richard is my co-host on our radio show, Gambling with an Edge, and also a friend. His insights come from his successful play on the table game side of the casino whereas mine come primarily from video poker. The similarities and differences in the way we think about things are definitely worthy of column-discussion.

The first part of his April 22 blog, “Random thoughts on random posts,” discusses his feelings when total strangers come up and ask, “Where is the best place to play?” In Munchkin’s opinion, it is very rude for people to even ask that question! If you were in business and asked your main competitor, “What are the names and addresses of your best customers?” you wouldn’t expect a complete and honest answer. Why would anyone think it is so different in gambling? Perhaps a casino can occasionally afford to lose $50,000 to $100,000 to a lone gambler. But if that gambler tells the world of his find and suddenly 150 players are trying to win that kind of money, you can be assured that the casino will make major changes in order to shut down their financial leak.

Today, my normal response to those types of questions is, “I play a lot at both the South Point and Palms. Why don’t you look at those casinos?” While this is a truthful answer, I am also able to direct some business to both casinos since they help sponsor our radio program. But if you want to know where else I play, plan to pay me at least $5,000 when you ask — and if that’s all you’re bringing I may well withhold my best place.

Munch also goes into how he chooses where to play — and his criteria are very different from mine. He likes to play with buddies. Almost all of my plays are solo events. He is a far more social person than I am. This fact alone goes a long way toward explaining why he likes table games and I specialize in video poker.

Although Munch has spent a good deal of time traveling, he’s not really keen on living out of a suitcase anymore. I’m even less eager for that than he is — although I did make five 300 miles each way weekend trips to Southern California last year. My life is set up in Vegas with a weekly radio show, often weekly classes, and a number of regular social events. Putting my Vegas life on hold and spending a week in Iowa, for example, happens very infrequently at best. In the past, I have played heavily out of state, but most of those occurrences were when a casino sent me some money and invited me to come and play. (I plan on doing more of that in May and June of this year.) The type of opportunities Munchkin chases are of a different nature entirely. The casinos generally do NOT send him personal invitations and often they do not know they have a game that is advantageous for the player until they see Munch leaving their casino with more money than he brought.

Richard has traveled extensively over the years — often for gambling. Very occasionally, while traveling for other purposes, I’ve played only small amounts in foreign casinos. For example, on two occasions Shirley and I have gone on cruises out of Barcelona, Spain. We like to arrive a day or two early in order to adjust for jet lag. Barcelona has a couple of casinos and one has a good Joker Two Pair pay schedule — but a pay schedule that is unusual and made by a manufacturer of whom I’ve never heard. Learning to play a new Joker Wild game at the professional level in an hour or two without all of my tools available is a major test of my capabilities. And Barcelona is such an interesting place for tourists, I wasn’t “allowed” to spend all my time in a casino. Perhaps I could have made a stand and gotten my way, but you can only win so many of these arguments without taking a toll on the relationship. I judged that the game wasn’t lucrative enough to justify starting our cruise vacation on a sour note.

When I told Richard I was writing about his recent blog, his response was “LOL, we are like the serpent swallowing its tail. I write about your articles and you write about mine.” Although that creates an image I don’t want to think about (I hope he doesn’t have athlete’s foot!), he’s probably right. I’ll try to get my inspiration for next week’s article elsewhere!

Facebooktwitteryoutubeinstagram
Video Poker
Legal online poker started today.
Podcast – guest Anthony Curtis

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Join LVAs Mailing List


Sign me up for:

GWAE Post Categories

  • Advantage Play (653)
    • Advanced Strategy (262)
    • Advice for Players (258)
    • Comps & Promos (75)
    • Game Protection (10)
  • Breaking News (8)
    • News Stories (3)
  • Casino Games (395)
    • Blackjack (31)
    • Craps (11)
    • Other Table Games (13)
    • Poker (33)
    • Slot Machines (5)
    • Video Poker (302)
  • Daily Fantasy Sports (2)
  • Gambling Glossary & Terminology (19)
  • Gambling Online (7)
  • General Thoughts/Opinion (78)
  • GWAE Podcast Episodes (643)
  • Non-Casino Games (3)
  • Reviews: Books, Movies, TV (29)
  • Sports betting (46)
  • Tournaments (2)

Recent Comments

  • coconut on What Would You Do?
  • KOAficionado on Colin Jones (S1 E9): Knockout KISS
  • A McGill on New Blackjack, Same Old Baloney
  • 바카라사이트 on The Cheating Game
  • Bajilive on “You’ve Already Hit the Royal”

Recent Posts

  • Business credit cards for profession gamblers and APs
  • Podcast – Sherriff AP episode 9
  • Spinach!
  • THE IMPORTANCE OF EVALUATING YOUR RESULTS IN BLACKJACK
  • Billy’s Book
Never miss another post

GWAE Bloggers

  • About Andy Uyal
  • About Anthony Curtis
  • About Bill Ordine
  • About Blair Rodman
  • About Bob Dancer
  • About FrankB
  • About Jack Andrews
  • About James Grosjean
  • About Nicholas Colon
  • About Richard Munchkin
  • Bloggers
  • Play Desert Diamond
  • Podcast – attorney Bob Nersesian 12/8/22
  • Podcast – Mickey Crimm 3/23/2023
  • SuperBlog
“Gambling With An Edge” is a unique cyber-hub where some of most-respected minds in professional gambling collectively share their expertise, advanced-strategy tips, insights, and opinions via the GWAE “SuperBlog” and weekly GWAE radio show.
The expertise to be found here spans the full spectrum of casino games, advantage-play techniques, and legal-wagering opportunities in the U.S., with contributors including James Grosjean (AP, table games), Bob Dancer (video poker), Richard Munchkin (AP, author), Blair Rodman (poker), Frank B. (sports betting), and others.

Other LVA Blogs

Frugal Vegas with Jean Scott
LVA Travel
Stiffs & Georges with David McKee
Vegas with an Edge
Powered by LasVegasAdvisor.com copyright 1983-2018 Huntington Press | All Rights Reserved | Privacy Policy