What do you think is the most costly mistake in modern poker: a technical failure or an emotional breakdown?

dariana Orasma

dariana Orasma

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  • #1
For years, poker studies have focused on the perfect strategy: ranges, outs, and expected value. However, psychologists and mental coaches point out that the most costly mistakes are no longer technical, but invisible and emotional. Concepts like the "Curiosity Call" (paying out of curiosity to see what the opponent had), the "Pre-Dinner Shower" (making a risky play to go to dinner with a decent stack), or "Personal Revenge" (becoming obsessed with a specific opponent) are real bankroll drains that don't appear in any analysis software. This opens up a fascinating debate. Tell me if you've fallen into any of these traps; personally, I've had my share of negative experiences with many of them. 🤦
 
M6O6U6

M6O6U6

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Yes, these "invisible emotional leaks" are the true silent killers of the bankroll — far more expensive than any technical range or sizing error.
Trap I "fell into" (equivalent) How much it usually costs How I would avoid (or do avoid) Call out of curiosity Yes (hand analysis) Thousands over time Question: "Is this +EV or just curiosity?" Give up if it's not math.
Shower before dinner Yes (I see this at the end of a session) Entire stacks in bad situations Fixed rules: stop-loss/tempo, not the emotion of "dinner".
Personal revenge Yes (classic revenge for tilt) Entire bankroll on one table Mental reset: "it's just variance, it's not personal". I shift the focus to the entire table. In the end, these emotional leaks are more expensive than any bad play because they don't show up in solvers — they show up in the "tilt diary", in sessions that last too long, in nights that become "just another one".
 
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mkt

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  • #3
For me it’s emotional breakdown and it’s not even close. A technical mistake happens and you move on, but when you start tilting it can spiral fast and suddenly you’re punting stacks in spots you’d normally play fine. One bad beat can turn into an hour of terrible decisions if you’re not careful. I’ve seen way more bankrolls get wrecked by tilt than by someone misplaying a hand.
 
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gloria_marga

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  • #4
I have fallen into all those emotional traps, so I agree that the greatest loss can come from emotional exhaustion.
 
thwenth1983

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  • #5
Good morning everyone.

In my opinion, the biggest danger for a poker player — or for any type of player — is tilt, which means losing emotional control. An emotional collapse can make a player destroy their own bankroll. For example, you have a bankroll of $10,000 and you play a $109 tournament, which is within proper bankroll management. Then you lose, make two or three re-entries, keep losing, and don’t manage to cash. After that, you try to recover the money by playing other games, like Spin & Go or even casino games. That’s the problem: when you go on tilt, you start making bad decisions and can lose much more money.

Technical mistakes, on the other hand, are part of the game. Even good players sometimes play a hand they shouldn’t, like calling a 4-bet with 9-8 suited or 10-9 suited. According to theory, it is often a fold, but it happens. That’s normal in poker.

I admit that I have suffered from tilt myself. There were times when I lost in poker and tried to recover the money in casino games, even knowing that casino games are more for entertainment than for making money. In the end, that only made the situation worse.

That’s why I think the most important thing is to follow proper bankroll management. A common rule is to have around 100 buy-ins for the limit you play. For example, if you have $100, the ideal is to play $1 tournaments; if you have $200, play tournaments up to $2, and so on. This helps avoid impulsive decisions and protects your bankroll in the long run. ♠️
 
Botuna

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  • #6
dariana Orasma said:
For years, poker studies have focused on the perfect strategy: ranges, outs, and expected value. However, psychologists and mental coaches point out that the most costly mistakes are no longer technical, but invisible and emotional. Concepts like the "Curiosity Call" (paying out of curiosity to see what the opponent had), the "Pre-Dinner Shower" (making a risky play to go to dinner with a decent stack), or "Personal Revenge" (becoming obsessed with a specific opponent) are real bankroll drains that don't appear in any analysis software. This opens up a fascinating debate. Tell me if you've fallen into any of these traps; personally, I've had my share of negative experiences with many of them. 🤦
I think the key lesson is that most leaks in poker are mental, not technical. Many players study ranges and strategy a lot, but controlling emotions, patience, and discipline often makes the biggest difference over time.
 
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Ch3tz

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  • #7
A technical failure can cause more damage than a emotional breakdown. Technical failure keeps you sturdy to understand. Emotional breakdown cab be a stroke of luck. So i would pick emotional breakdown
 
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