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Old 08-16-06, 05:05 PM
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2Tone 2Tone is offline
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Seattle
Posts: 1,800
2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points2Tone has between 1500 and 1999 Rep Points
Default My take

Accepting the concept that poker is one never-ending game that you drop in and out of at will throughout your poker playing career, I keep ‘score’ based on how much I am up or down – lifetime – at end of my latest session. The number of winning or losing sessions doesn’t factor into this – just how much money I have made or lost in total.

Since that lifetime total is very much a macro view, I’ll also break that down into how I am doing year to date (or ‘month to date’, or even ‘Vegas trip to date’), as well as live vs. online, ring vs. tourney, etc.

TP’s example of the player who makes $200,500, then loses $200,000 back is interesting. Under my rules, his total score would still be +$500, though depending on how long he took to lose most of it back, the month to date total could reflect -$200k.

Meanwhile, bonuses, high hand jackpots, etc. all are added to the amount ‘won,’ just as if I had won them in a regular pot. But tips and ATM fees and any other directly related poker expenses (backing somebody) are all factored in as well, and count towards the minus column. This means if I am eventually fined $100k by Washington State for playing online, I’ll consider myself a losing player.
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