M
Mike_25
Guest
No, not willingly. Transparency and accountability are not in the casino's business interest. Their profits depend on people making emotionally-driven bets, not rational ones. By clouding the details, they keep players chasing the fantasy.
Casinos also don't want customers comparing the actual odds across different games. That might discourage some from playing altogether once they crunch the numbers. Ignorance is bliss as far as they're concerned. Some disclosures might even seem like an admission that the games are rigged against the player.
Only external pressures, like regulations, would force casinos to disclose more. And even then, they'll likely find ways to disseminate information without really elucidating anything meaningful. It's all part of the show. As the old saying goes, "the house always wins." So casinos have every incentive to keep players delightfully clueless about the big picture. Transparency only cuts into profits. The illusion of chance is far more lucrative.
Casinos also don't want customers comparing the actual odds across different games. That might discourage some from playing altogether once they crunch the numbers. Ignorance is bliss as far as they're concerned. Some disclosures might even seem like an admission that the games are rigged against the player.
Only external pressures, like regulations, would force casinos to disclose more. And even then, they'll likely find ways to disseminate information without really elucidating anything meaningful. It's all part of the show. As the old saying goes, "the house always wins." So casinos have every incentive to keep players delightfully clueless about the big picture. Transparency only cuts into profits. The illusion of chance is far more lucrative.