Since you asked, I’ll give you the full answer. I actually enjoy writing and sharing the mindset behind things, so this might end up being a bit longer than expected.
Honnestly, only for the past few months. My experience with online casinos in general is pretty recent.
For most of my life, I never really experimented with it and I had almost no interest in it. But this winter was mentally tough for me, and somehow I ended up going down a rabbit hole I never thought I would. In the span of a few months, I’ve probably tried close to a hundred online casinos.
The truth is, poker used to be enough to occupy my mind completely. And I still love it. But after 16 years of grinding and trying to perfect your game every single day, something changes. Your relationship with the game evolves. At some point it becomes almost mechanical. Predictable. The same patterns over and over. The hype and mystery that once came with it slowly fade.
At the same time, there have been a lot of major changes and upheavals in my life recently. I think that reflected in my philosophy toward gambling too. I needed change somewhere. Something new, intense, different. Something that could occupy my mind during darker times.
What’s ironic is that poker has always been my only true passion when it comes to gambling.
Peoole close to me used to look down on it. To them it was just "gambling." But they couldn’t see what it really was for me. I wasn’t just gambling, I was building my own world. A world of discipline, sacrifice, ambition, and constant self-improvement. A world where I could be different from the typical 9-to-5 path. A world where I could create my own small miracles — road trips to tournaments, chasing big scores, pushing myself to get better every day.
The problem is that people who don’t know poker often confuse a grinder with a gambler. They mix apples and oranges.
And that hurt me more than I like to admit.
Because I knew the difference. But the people around me often didn’t. Feeling misunderstood like that made me develop an almost defensive mindset toward anything that looked like pure gambling. I didn’t want to be associated with that label. Not even close.
So without even realizing it, I completely dissociated myself from everything that wasn’t poker.
When I walked into a casino, I didn’t see the lights. I didn’t hear the machines. I barely noticed the crowd. I had tunnel vision. I was there for the game — the one where preparation, discipline, and mental strength actually gave you a chance to control your destiny.
It felt almost like bringing an Olympic mindset to the table. Every session was another chance to prove to myself that the dreams I was chasing weren’t illusions. That my strange little "unicorn world" of poker ambition actually meant something.
And whenever people doubted me, it pushed me even harder.
But the truth is, it also wasn’t always healthy. I’m a very sensitive and socially aware person, and constantly feeling like the people you care about don’t believe in you takes a toll. Outside the poker table, I often felt like I was fighting another battle — with family, friends, partners who thought I was just gambling my life away.
They imagined debts, mafia stories, and inevitable failure. Meanwhile any serious poker player knows the opposite is required to survive: bankroll management, discipline, planning, constant study. Most of the real work happens away from the table, between the ears.
When you’re chasing that dream seriously, there isn’t much space left for anything else. You study. You sacrifice. You analyze every mistake. You grind experience. You try to improve relentlessly.
And in that mindset, there was no room for pure games of chance. Poker was the only form of gambling I respected because skill could actually influence the outcome.
For almost 16 years, poker was my entire gambling universe.
But lately I think my soul needed a break. Some change.
As we get older, life can break us a little. And sometimes that reflects in how we approach things — including gambling. My mindset today is a little less pure than it used to be. For years I wouldn’t even consider putting one dollar on blackjack or a slot machine.
If I went to a casino with friends, I wasn’t really with them. I would immediately head straight to the cash tables.
So I never expected to drift this far into the casino side of things. It’s a strange mix of love and hate.
Because if we’re honest, pressing a button to line up three reels or trying to make 21 with three cards doesn’t compare to what poker gives you. Poker offers depth, psychology, strategy, personal growth.
I’ve always been anti-slots and pro poker grind.
But for the first time in a long time, I allowed myself to explore something different.
Maybe not because it’s better.
But because sometimes the mind just needs something new when the old fire has been burning for too long.