Found it.
http://forum.drunkenstepfather.com/s...ad.php?t=74497 feel free to delete this and award it to a regular though. lol |
Found it too but since i don't know what 'credits' are used for give it to someone that does
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11 posts? You aught to go away.
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Content, Pictures and Download links visible to registered users only. And I think my vig should be a PM of your bewbs. Or 100,000 credits. Or both. Because if you don't ask the answer is always no. Unless you are my exwife, then the answer is always no. Bitch. |
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Content, Pictures and Download links visible to registered users only. Did you win a car on The Price Is Right too? . |
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Content, Pictures and Download links visible to registered users only. Credits can be used for...participating in my raffles when I hold them. Also for use in the Arcade, but if you use an Arcade pass and win, you don't get to put your name in so I don't get the whole Arcade "free" pass thing. Especially when you still don't pay if you don't use it too. :confused: :evillol Code:
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Vigorish, or simply the vig, also known as juice, the cut or the take, is the amount charged by a bookmaker, or bookie, for taking a bet from a gambler.
In the United States, it also means the interest on a shark's loan. The term originates from the Russian word for winnings, выигрыш vyigrysh.[1] Bookmakers use this practice to make money on their wagers regardless of the outcome. To minimize their risk, some bookmakers do not want to have an interest in either side winning in a given sporting event. Instead, they are interested in getting equal betting on both outcomes of the event. In this way, the bookmaker minimizes his risk and always collects a small commission from the vigorish. The bookmaker will normally adjust the odds or the line. The concept is also sometimes referred to as the overround, although this is technically different, being the percentage the event book is above 100%, whereas the vigorish is the bookmaker's percentage profit on the total stakes made on the event. For example, 20% overround is vigorish of 162⁄3%. The connecting formulae are v = \frac{o}{(1 + o)} and o = \frac{v}{(1 - v)} where o is the overround. It is simplest to assume that vigorish is factored in proportionally to the true odds, although this need not be the case. Under proportional vigorish, a moneyline odds bet listed at −100 vs. −100 without vigorish (fair odds) could become −110 vs. −110 with vigorish factored in. Under disproportional vigorish, it could become −120 vs. +100. A fairly common amount of vig is ~2%. [2] |
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