What is video poker?
Video poker first became commercially viable once it was economical to combine a television-like monitor with a solid state central processing unit. The earliest models appeared at the same time as the first personal computers were produced, in the mid-1970s, although they were rather primitive by today's standards.
Video poker became more firmly established when IGT (now a market-leading provider of gaming devices) brought out Draw Poker in 1979. Throughout the 1980s, video poker became increasingly popular, as people found the devices less intimidating than playing at the tables. Today, video poker enjoys a prominent place on the gaming floors of many casinos, and the game is especially popular with Las Vegas locals, who tend to patronize properties off the Las Vegas Strip for the better odds offered by those establishments.
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John Patrick's Video Poker: The Complete Guide to Playing and Winning
John Patrick
Lyle Stuart, 2001-09
Price: $14.95
Keywords: Amazon.com Stores, Card Games, Computer Internet Books, Computer Video Game Books, Computer Video Games, Computers Internet, Entertainment, Gambling, Games Strategy Guides, Home Office, Poker, Puzzles Games, Specialty Stores, Video Electronic Games, Video Games, Video Poker
Reviews:
Don't buy this book
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First he starts by telling you should play table blackjack instead, but if you are too timid to try to learn blackjack, you can minimize your losses by playing video poker his way. He doesn't seem to understand certain video poker games are positive expectation games (unlike blackjack, unless you can track the cards). His advice will quickly turn a positive expectation game (e.g., Duces Wild has a 100.7% expected payback if played flawlessly) into a negative one. One glaring example of his ignorance is "play the minimum for awhile until you see how he machine is paying". The fact is the greatest expected return is achieved by always playing max coins. He doesn't seem to understand each hand is a completely independent event from the prior hand. Some of the hands he says to "hold" are just wrong.
Parting shot: if the author is such as clever professional gambler why does he need to write books like this to make money?