ycming said:
So you think is possible to keep a low ROR with £300, wonging out ALL negative count and make more than say 1-2 units / hour?
If so, I would like to learn that
You seem determined to misunderstand me!
£300 is not enough. Everyone is in agreement on that.
The alternatives are -
- Don't play at all until you have a much bigger BR.
- Gamble aggressively with the £300, accepting that there is a very high risk that you will lose it all.
- Attempt to play with the lowest possible RoR for the £300 by wonging like crazy and only playing the lowest limit tables. (And still face an overly large RoR). This will give a miserly rate of return unless you happen to get lucky early on and go through repeated cycles of BR-growth and bet upsizing. It will also be next to impossible for the practical reasons I mentioned in my first post.
My preference would be for option 1.
ycming said:
How do you define over betting?
If I know my ROR (say a high of 30-40%) with the bet spread I am using before I went into the casino and stick to exactly that spread, am I overbetting?
The term 'overbetting' was not meant to be a pejorative one. Yes a 30-40% RoR is overbetting. But if it's a deliberate, informed choice, then that's fair enough.
I was just confused by what you meant by 'aggressive wonging' and needed clarification that what you meant was an aggressive bet size. I'm not trying to start an argument, just get past any language barriers.
ycming said:
As for the max bet, I believe with fully kelly and at a 2% advantage he would be betting £6. So i still don't think someone with £300 should apply a full kelly
Again, I don't really know what you mean by that, and suspect that you may have misunderstood me in some way.
Wonging in at +3 would mean a 1% advantage, so the £3 table-minimum bet corresponds to a full Kelly bet. If the TC rises to +5 (and thus the advantage rises to 2%) then you could argue that the bet should then rise to £6, and so on.
However it can also be argued that full-Kelly betting is too high to begin with. (Even with a large BR it's not usual to bet that high a fraction. And when you can't resize your bets downwards after losses there's an added incentive not to bet that high.)
The wong-in point could have been delayed even later than +3 so that the risk would be lower, but that would mean playing even fewer hands than is already the case with +3. So a compromise would be to still start at +3, but not raise your bets so early.
Now I'm not putting any of this forward as a practical or worthwhile proposition. It's really just an exercise in showing exactly how and why £300 is not enough to begin with.