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na4bart
10-11-2004, 02:04 AM
Let me start by saying I am not a mathmatician, so please keep your coments simple.
I have records of my play (as a prop) for many different games and limits in a spreadsheet separated by game and limit. I have my hourly rate and SD for each game and for all games lumped together. They comprise over 1000 hours of play (B&M). I am net loser in two games (crazy pineapple, E.O.), net winner in the rest. Overall net winner. This is about 34,000 hands played. Limits range from 20/40 down to 3/6. HR= 12.50 and SD= 177.00. Do I have enough data to be comfortable with assuming I do not improve my game? Can this even be answered?

Thanks

garyc8
10-11-2004, 06:59 AM
A good discussion of this is available in Mason's "Gambling Theory and other topics.
I would recommend separating your results by limit. For example, on my spreadsheet I have one sheet for 5/10 hold'em, one for 10/20 hold'em, etc.
You compute your overall SD by dividing the SD by the square root of the # of hours played. Figure your real long term expectation is within 3 deviations of your results.

Example:

Say you've played 225 hours of 5/10 hold'em. You have a win rate of $9/hr (in that game), and a SD of 135(in that game).
Your overall SD is your SD (135) divided by the square root of 225. 135/15= 9.
This means (using the 3 deviation rule) that your real long-term exp. should fall btwn. -$18/hr. and +$36/hr.

It's worth separating all results by limit. For one thing I suspect your SD will be higher in bigger games. In my experience they are more often aggressive.

For example, my 5/10(with a full kill) SD hovers around a very managable 130. While my 10/20(usually played w/ a 1/2 kill) SD is a bumpier 325.

I realize this is daunting. It really takes a lot of hours to be sure of one's results. But this is the hard truth of fluctuations.

I hope this helps.