If we have fun while gambling and make profits, that's great, isn't it? However, I think this is difficult to do in the long term. Why do I say that? Because if you feel excited when gambling, it means you are having too many emotions with this game, and this is really not good for people who want to make profits by gambling in the long term. Because emotions are what will kill our accounts, excitement when winning and anxiety when losing will greatly affect your gambling results.
On the contrary, if you put your emotions aside with the goal of making profits from gambling, the results may be better, but that comes with the boredom of gambling, right? The excitement of winning money will no longer exist, the joy of gambling will gradually disappear, your goal will only be to seek profit.
In short, depending on what your purpose that come to gambling, there will be results corresponding to that purpose. If just for entertainment, don't expect to make long-term profits, and vice versa.
you're thinking about gambling long-term, looking for consistent profit. That's chasing a ghost. The minute emotions get involved (and they will) your money's as good as gone. Excitement, fear, greed... it's the recipe for disaster. Think you can keep a cool head? Maybe for a while, but eventually, you'll chase the high, throw logic out the window, and bam, that long-term plan is toast.
WWhether you're playing for the rush or the cash, it's a mug's game. Emotion fuels it all. Take that away, and what are you left with? A mind-numbingly dull grind that'll make you question your sanity. Yeah, maybe you'll see some wins, but is it worth sacrificing the core of what makes gambling exciting?
Whether you're a thrill-seeker or a profit-chaser, the game is rigged against you. The house edge is a guarantee, not just a number. Gamble for fun? Sure. Gamble for a living? That's a slow walk off a financial cliff. Most walk away with regret, not riches. The only smart play is to see gambling for what it is: a risky game that'll take more than just your money, it'll take a piece of you too.