To each their own. After seeing 40 hours of rolls a week and strategies for a decade (so, somewhere around 20 THOUSAND hours, or 866 days worth), and untold number of 20-40 minute rolls and how much people have won, I've learned it's all about the core strategy, whatever is used AFTER the regression, and the regression itself merely handicaps the strategy by a large degree.
I completely agree with your definition of the gambler’s fallacy. I also think any regression strategy is for money management only. The fear/respect for the 7 is about not wanting to lose whatever amount that was at risk on the original bets. If a player bets $3200 across, gets a hit ($700 minimum), & regressed to $640 across … that player should power press (triple lux or anything comparable) because there is no fear of the 7 now. The player doesn’t care when the 7 shows. That is the mentality of most players. Their risk of losing their original bets is gone. When the 7 comes after the regression on the short rolls, which is the majority of the time, comparing that to another player with the same original bets and who kept pressing? Yes the regression player is not going to win as much, but they are not going to go down in flames either.
@@SkillandLuckCRAPS I try to get my money out in one hit and then attack the inside with power press collect my fear is not fear of the 7 it’s low bank roll I’m only able to use a 600$ bank roll. You give me a hour roll and I don’t regress I’ll squees the casino for a lot of money. But when I regress as example I like the 220$ inside regreee one hit to 66$ inside and throw the 4$ change in the hard ways at this point I attack the casino.
The problem is, the number of regression players that regress then switch to a power press is almost zero. I honestly can't remember the last time I saw a regression followed by a power press. Definitely years. 99.999% of regression players ARE regression players because they don't have the power press mentality to begin with. If a regression player power pressed, i'd consider it a much more viable strategy.
@@sincityliving1260 Is it learning/memorizing/practicing the power press moves? Or what can a regression player do to feel comfortable in power pressing?
I’ve learned over the last 17 years of playing that regression is the key and the best way to attack the game
To each their own. After seeing 40 hours of rolls a week and strategies for a decade (so, somewhere around 20 THOUSAND hours, or 866 days worth), and untold number of 20-40 minute rolls and how much people have won, I've learned it's all about the core strategy, whatever is used AFTER the regression, and the regression itself merely handicaps the strategy by a large degree.
I completely agree with your definition of the gambler’s fallacy. I also think any regression strategy is for money management only. The fear/respect for the 7 is about not wanting to lose whatever amount that was at risk on the original bets.
If a player bets $3200 across, gets a hit ($700 minimum), & regressed to $640 across … that player should power press (triple lux or anything comparable) because there is no fear of the 7 now. The player doesn’t care when the 7 shows. That is the mentality of most players. Their risk of losing their original bets is gone.
When the 7 comes after the regression on the short rolls, which is the majority of the time, comparing that to another player with the same original bets and who kept pressing? Yes the regression player is not going to win as much, but they are not going to go down in flames either.
@@SkillandLuckCRAPS I try to get my money out in one hit and then attack the inside with power press collect my fear is not fear of the 7 it’s low bank roll I’m only able to use a 600$ bank roll. You give me a hour roll and I don’t regress I’ll squees the casino for a lot of money. But when I regress as example I like the 220$ inside regreee one hit to 66$ inside and throw the 4$ change in the hard ways at this point I attack the casino.
The problem is, the number of regression players that regress then switch to a power press is almost zero. I honestly can't remember the last time I saw a regression followed by a power press. Definitely years. 99.999% of regression players ARE regression players because they don't have the power press mentality to begin with. If a regression player power pressed, i'd consider it a much more viable strategy.
@@sincityliving1260 Is it learning/memorizing/practicing the power press moves? Or what can a regression player do to feel comfortable in power pressing?