Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
- Posts
- 16,986
- Reactions
- 1,973
I'm sure we'd have a lot more people employed in small business etc via increased consumer spending if not for these monsters. They rip a fortune out of the community and send it partly to government and largely to a few already very wealthy individuals.
I'm not against them totally, but the blatant concentration of machines and marketing in lower socio-economic suburbs is a disgrace.
As a general rule, I'm somewhat against meddling in the affairs of individuals "for their own good". But these poker machines do a LOT of damage to many and there's no reason, other than greed, why we need de facto casinos in every poorer suburb. They could always drive or catch a bus to the casino, but the reality is these machines aren't really that great, people won't go out of their way to use them. Hence they're put right under peoples' noses combined with a marketing blitz to convince the masses that throwing away money is "fun".
Put them in legitimate casinos that's fine. Likewise in non-profit clubs etc. But I'd very gladly see the end of round the clock gaming in working class suburbs. Judgemental may be, but these machines do bring a lot of misery to many.
Just think how much better off we'd all be if the $ millions poured into these machines went instead into local small business, charity or anything of lasting value. So sad to see all those old clunkers in the car park while their owners hand a fortune to someone who could already afford any means of transport they choose.
I refuse to play these machines on principle. Never have and never will unless they're put back where they belong - and that's not under the noses of everyone.
My dad spent 20 years selling and servicing them, I spent my summer holidays learning how they work, how to fix them & how people cheat them.no problem - you have your version of events, and i have mine.
I've got mates that have ended up wasting most of their money on these things, hock their gear, lie to their partners about hocking the gear and losing wallets, lost their partners and live in a state of remorse, depression and self loathing. I know it is ultimately their choice, though some people are wired to be vulnerable to these things.
Some intersting analyis/opinion pieces put pokies as one of the major contributing factors to cbd violence in major cities. Young people by and large can't stand pokies, and as suburban venues switch over to pokie barns, this pushes more and more people into the CBD at late times as there is little local entartainment left in many suburbs.
In essence, you now have group of younger people drinking in close proximity, from varying levels of socio-economic backgrounds, with different expectations of acceptable behavior - and it is inevitable that some of these group clash.
As a live music fan, I see pokies as the work of the devil - thank god Melbourne hasn't suffered the same fate as Syndey in terms of live music venue closures. Yet.
As for the 87-98% return that's only if you pocket every winning the machine returns isn't it? As you know most people will 're-invest' these winnings back into the machine waiting for the big one and almost always walk away with a 0% return. Do any of you know what the actual return is as a %?
And yet we had alcohol and late night venues for years before violence on city streets became a problem...Alcohol 100% is the problem for violence
Or, is there just more people to commit the violence and the media have a new hot topic?And yet we had alcohol and late night venues for years before violence on city streets became a problem...Alcohol 100% is the problem for violence
There is alcohol, drugs, sex\prostitusion, cigarettes and many other things that all have the same effect on the people they love.
This problem with the pokies, is it really that much more different then when you go to the news agency to buy a lottery ticket and see others there playing $100's? Yet we hardly ever hear about these people. Hardly ever hear about the people who spend their life savings on the horses. These things do happen, yet there is no nation wide whinge to say these thing are evil and crap.
Just to add that trading currency pairs can be addictive. Take a win and want to win more. Take a loss and want to win it back again. 24 hours/day 5 days/week. At least with stocks they are on a "natural brake" as you typed. The daily 6 hour session.Off the soap box..!!
Yes that all makes sense. Though, what I was curious to know was how much people actually removed from the machines (i.e. physical cash) as a percentage of what was put in? I imagine most of the few big prizes get pocketed and the multitude of smaller ones just get played and lost. The figure must be low 5-10% maybe?the return to player (RTP%) is what the machine is set on for its lifespan. the ARTP rolls up and down i have seen some on 300% and the same machine on 8% minutes later
Yes, lots of anecdotal evidence from people regarding this. I haven't seen or experienced it myself, but you hear the stories. Any studies done on this? Surely.I think they are a destruction to families that dont know when to stop.
I couldnt think of anything more boring, sitting infront of a machine watching spinning wheels, but each to their own.
Boring for some, highly addictive for others. Its the anticipation of a big win (or any win) that keeps people sitting there for hours feeding the beasts.
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