Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts

12/24/2009

Review of Buttery Wholesomeness (Paperback)

buttery wHOLsomeness is an amazingly funny supplement to the original, outrageous HoL mock-RPG.

If HoL's absolutely freeform character generation isn't good enough for you, then you can go through chart hell, with such opportunities as finding God's wallet; being older brother to Trudy, Scion of Zeus; and getting in trouble for attempting to declare the entire population of your homeworld as dependents.

Also is the legendary minigame Freebase, an RP system in the World of Reality!

Anyone who's ever cracked an RPG book should have HoL and buttery wHoLsomeness, if only to disrupt your own game with uproarious laughter. (I've had this banned from LARPing.)

Product Description
The newest edition of the sole supplement of HoL, BUTTery wHOLesomeness has several new pages added but still has all of the bitterness and uncontrolled anger that you've come to expect from HoL products!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Buttery Wholesomeness (Paperback)

12/04/2009

Review of Tales from the Tiltboys (Hardcover)

I just finished this lovely book.This is a book about friendship and shared life experiences, woven around poker and roshambo and the circle game.Once you understand the concept of "tilt" as a form of currency in the game of life (to be earned, spent, loved, leveraged and traded) you will ADORE every word of this funny, imaginative, entirely entertaining book.Kudos to Kim Scheinberg the editor.She did an admirable job.

I smiled from the first page to the last. I laughed out loud - a lot.I identified with the camaraderie of people making and cherishing lifelong friendships.Anyone who has ever had a shared life experience with even one close friend will enjoy this book.It made me jealous - I wished I had been a Tiltboy.But, more than mere jealousy, I increased the value I put on my own friendships with every page I turned.I hated to reach the end.

Enjoy!


Product Description
If you have any interest in poker or gambling, you will enjoy reading about the Tiltboys. Even casual poker fans will recognize Phil Gordon, the ringleader of the bunch, as the expert commentator on Bravo's "Celebrity Poker Showdown." Imagine the guys from "Animal House" with high SAT scores. They are a bunch of buddies who went to Stanford together and began a weekly poker game that led to weekend trips to Las Vegas and, for a few of them, to a life of playing poker professionally.

Phil Gordon made dot.com millions and is now living the good life in the poker world and on television. Perry Friedman won a World Series of Poker event a couple years ago. While Dave "Diceboy" Lambert is, according to the other Tiltboys, the luckiest human being on the planet. It's "Swingers"-meets-"Rounders." Read these true tales of gambling, friendship, and Wednesday night poker. These anecdotes are a testament to just how amusing a life devoted to excess and debauchery can be.

From the Publisher
Praise for the Tiltboys"This book goes to show you how one group of guys that play poker together can go on to rule the world!"--Phil Hellmuth Jr.-Poker legend and author of Play Poker Like the Pros

"Getting near the Tiltboys is like falling into the orbit of a very bright, unstable star. Their cheerful message: quit your job, ignore the advice of your loved ones and go live forever on the Island of the Lost Boys. Read this book at your own peril."--Ira Glass-Host of public radio's award-winning This American Life

"Thank you, Tiltboys! You've changed my life! It drives my girlfriend wild when I spank her with your new book Tales from the Tiltboys."--Chris "Jesus" Ferguson-2000 World Series of Poker Champion and Honorary Tiltboy

"If enough people buy this book, maybe I won't have to pay Perry to be quiet during tournaments anymore."--Erik Seidel-Six-time WSOP bracelet winner

Click Here to see more reviews about: Tales from the Tiltboys (Hardcover)

Review of Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street (Hardcover)

This is an excellent book about the discovery of the Kelly formula that is unknown outside gambling.This story has three protagonists.Two of them were scientists working at Bell Labs: Claude Shannon, a genius polymath who developed information theory; and John Kelly, a maverick genius, who is directly responsible for the development of Kelly's formula.The third one is a brilliant MIT mathematician, Ed Thorp.

Ed Thorp tested the Kelly formula in both gambling and investing.Also, he came up with an options formula before Fischer Black and Myron Scholes.His formula missed a risk-free rate component due to the structure of the market at the time.As a result, Ed Thorp remained in obscurity while Black and Scholes became famous.

Ed Thorp succeeded in deriving superior returns in both gambling and investing.But, it was not so much because of Kelly's formula.He developed other tools to achieve superior returns.In gambling, Ed Thorp succeeded at Black Jack by developing the card counting method.He just used intuitively Kelly's formula to increase his bets whenever the odds were in his favor.Later, he ran a hedge fund for 20 years until the late 80s and earned a rate of return of 14% handily beating the market's 8% during the period.Also, his hedge fund hardly lost any value on black Monday in October 1987, when the market crashed by 22%.The volatility of his returns was far lower than the market.He did this by exploiting market inefficiencies using warrants, options, and convertible bonds.The Kelly formula was for him a risk management discipline and not a direct source of excess return.

Ed Thorp's career as a hedge fund manager was temporarily cut short.This was due to his fund being involved in a tax-avoiding securities scheme with Drexel Burnham.Thorp was not guilty; but, the fund had to be liquidated.The author stated many of Milken wrongdoings.One included getting large equity positions attached to the junk bonds he issued.The companies thought they were issuing convertible bonds.However, the equity component went straight into Milken's pocket as he sold the bonds to investors as high yield debt with no equity attached.

Ed Thorp rebounded from this mishap and started a second hedge fund in 1994.Thorp continued reaping above market return.As the author states, Ed Thorp's genius consists in "...his continuous ability to discover new market inefficiencies ... as old ones played out."Ed Thorp closed this second fund in 2002.He is now independently exploring inefficiencies in gambling.

Claude Shannon amassed large wealth by recording one of the best investment records.His performance had little to do with Kelly's formula.Between 1966 and 1986, his record beat even Warren Buffet (28% to 27% respectively).Shannon strategy was similar to Buffet.Both their stock portfolios were concentrated, and held for the long term.Shannon achieved his record by holding mainly three stocks (Teledyne, Motorola, and HP).The difference between the two was that Shannon invested in technology because he understood it well, while Buffet did not.

John Kelly was a chain smoking, gun collecting brilliant physicist.He died young at 41 of an aneurysm.He worked closely with Shannon at Bell Labs.Besides being a charismatic character the author does not write much about his life compared to the other two (Shannon and Thorp).

The Kelly formula is Edge/Odds (as explained on page 72).In investment circles, this formula is not always useful because it is hard to quantify your Edge (value of proprietary information).However, Kelly's formula has intuitive practical implications.It entails you should focus on an investment internal rate of return (IRR) instead of its average yearly return.The IRR is always less.Another implication is that higher risk is not always compensated by higher return.There is an optimal risk level beyond which risk taking becomes destructive.The author mentions the Long Term Capital Management as a case in point.

I recommend other excellent similar books: "Fischer Black and the Revolutionary Idea of Finance" by Perry Mehrling, and "When Genius Failed.The Rise and Fall of Long Term Capital Management" by Roger Lowenstein.Both these books describe luminaries infinance and investment fields who were often in contact with Ed Thorp and Claude Shannon.Another excellent book is Sylvia Nasar's "A Beautiful Mind" about John Nash, the Game Theorist.




Click Here to see more reviews about: Fortune's Formula: The Untold Story of the Scientific Betting System That Beat the Casinos and Wall Street (Hardcover)