by Cactus Jack » Fri Mar 16, 2007 4:37 pm
I understand what you're saying, Rhound. I've been thinking about this, too. I think if this is still going on after the WSOP, then it will rapidly go downhill. We here in Vegas will hold onto it longer, but by the end of the year we'll be feeling it, too.
If the WSOP goes as I think it will, and there will be between 2 and 3,000 for the ME, it will be seen as over, that will be the headlines, and the bandwagon will go in the wrong direction. Maybe this will wake up Harrahs, etc. (They may also be delighted as they can shrink poker rooms and put in more slots.)
But, I also think that a lot of people have gotten exposed to playing poker, found out how much fun it is, the social part of it, and that it's better than losing ten times as much on house games, and it isn't going to fall as far as it did in the early 90's, when most rooms in Vegas are closed.
Now, if Sands and Harrahs and the Wynn Internet Poker Room were to open, and you could use your Amex to fund the account, then I think you'd see a whole new boom. A large number of people I know and those I've played with have never played a hand of Internet poker for real money. You'd be amazed. Many, many play for monopoly money. They say they don't trust the Net casinos. (If the word gets out about how much money players have "lost" during this prohibition crisis, we might never get these people to ever play for real money.) But, if they think Harrahs et al are behind the new casinos, then you'd have a whole new round of players and things will be very good indeed.
As with everything else in poker, it depends.
"Are the players better as the stakes go up? It's not an exam; it's a buyin." Barry Tanenbaum