Why Do Players Misjudge Variance Even After Years of Playing Poker?

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Ace

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Many experienced players also struggle with separating short-term results from long-term expectation. A winning week can feel like improved skill, while a downswing feels like bad luck or poor strategy. How do you personally distinguish variance from real leaks in your game? Do you track results in a structured way or rely on intuition?
 
Many poker players understand variance in theory but struggle with it emotionally. A few bad sessions can feel more important than thousands of hands of solid play. People naturally remember painful losses and dramatic wins, which makes it easy to underestimate how much short-term luck still influences results.
 
I know a guy that won consistently for two weeks and started talking like a poker prophet. By month end, the story changed and he lost everything 😂. This is exactly why I stopped trusting “hot streak” screenshots online. Most people mistake temporary luck for permanent skill.
 
Many experienced players also struggle with separating short-term results from long-term expectation. A winning week can feel like improved skill, while a downswing feels like bad luck or poor strategy. How do you personally distinguish variance from real leaks in your game? Do you track results in a structured way or rely on intuition?
I’m very self-aware, and I’m often my own toughest critic. I try to learn from my experiences, and continue developing good habits. Your approach is key, trust the process, and stay consistent.
 

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