I wish I could have posted this in a more better place but since the thoughts came from gambling addiction, I thought it wise to ask this question over here and I hope we can discuss and get this straight.
Just as the tittle already ask, I really want to know if people who are successful in gambling also seen as addicts because I believe for one to be successful in gambling or whatever they choose to do, there must be some good amount of time and effort invested in it as well as money and we know that a successful gambler must have invested both time, effort and even money to make any reasonable winning and these also are features of an addict as there are always excessive time spent on a betting site.
Now let's be sincere, will you also classify a successful gambler as an addict?
What's your definition of a successful "gambler"? Someone who won big luckily? Yeah, there are few, but I doubt there would by an real "successful" gamblers in the world who keeps on gambling and keeps on winning. Eventually that gambler will lose and end up with a negative balance. The more you keep on gambling, the more the change of losing in the long run. But if you are talking about other gamblers that actually promote gambling through events, streams, tournaments and so one, then yeah, they are successful, but if you dig deeper, you will notice that they make money from "working" as a "gambler", not by gambling money. So no, they aren't gambling addict. They are just working like us.
Gambling can range from anxiety to elation. Does that make a gambler "successful"? In the long term, gamblers lose, according to scholarly gambling discourse.
Misconception: a successful gambler always wins. A fallacy. Gambling is a gamble. The house edge will eventually deplete even the luckiest gambler's money. Gamble with money you can afford to lose and know when to quit.
Positively, gaming success can be achieved outside of betting. Your entertainers and promoters succeeded without risking their own money. They're winning a separate game. The goal is to win, not play.