I skimmed over the comments, and I'm surprised to see no mention of it here. Maybe I missed it.
The house always wins, and they still won. This is, for each of them at just a few million, very cheap advertising. Consider how poker/holdem was hyped during the last decade, this is just the same in a different setting.
They will easily win those few millions each back and more. For every smart person such as this guy, there are thousands of idiots out there. The article itself mentions they're trying to lure in high-rollers. This looks rather obvious.
Thus, the title, how Atlantic City supposedly "got broke" by a man, seems very misleading in this context.
The house always wins, and they still won. This is, for each of them at just a few million, very cheap advertising. Consider how poker/holdem was hyped during the last decade, this is just the same in a different setting.
They will easily win those few millions each back and more. For every smart person such as this guy, there are thousands of idiots out there. The article itself mentions they're trying to lure in high-rollers. This looks rather obvious.
Thus, the title, how Atlantic City supposedly "got broke" by a man, seems very misleading in this context.
Still, maybe I'm missing something here.