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Why are the poor stuck and unable to get rich?
When I play Dou Dizhu,
1. When I only have 4,000 Happy Beans, no matter how many times I win, the limit is 4,000 Happy Beans.
2. If my opponent has 100k Happy Beans, I want to win all his beans, I need to win 7 consecutive games, while he only needs one game to win all my beans.
3. When I win 2 million Happy Beans, I find it hard to lose everything in the low-stakes area, so every time I win 150k Happy Beans, Tencent will let me go to a higher-level place to play with people there. Some people have hundreds of millions of beans, and if you want to win all their beans, it's basically impossible. Conversely, you can easily lose the 150k beans you've worked hard to save in one shot.
4. In Dou Dizhu, you can receive 4,000 Happy Beans three times a day. If poor people have no money to recharge and play Dou Dizhu, then the rich will also lose interest in the game. So, it’s necessary to have more and more poor players, so that the rich will recharge on this platform.
5. Long ago, the game center’s Dou Dizhu allowed negative scores, and there was another strange rule: if you run away, you lose immediately. The runner-up’s score doubles, the game ends directly, and others get no points!
Once, my classmate played Dou Dizhu, and there were many bombs in that round. Usually, a triple card round would lose about six points, but in that round, I thought if I lost, my classmate would lose nearly hundreds of points.
When my classmate was about to lose, he directly quit the game. I said, “Aren’t you afraid your points will double?” He said, “It’s okay to have negative points now. I’d rather lose double than let them win so many points.”
(See, if you push the poor into a desperate situation, it’s very dangerous for the rich too, and even for society, it’s very risky!)
6. There is a tool in Dou Dizhu called a card counting device, costing 6 yuan a day. There’s also another tool that, once purchased, allows you to prioritize calling the landlord.
For the rich, they have many tools to make money, but the poor have very few tools to earn money.
7. In Dou Dizhu, there is a gameplay called self-selected cards. When I play this way, ensuring my own cards are good, I always protect the player with the most Happy Beans, and let go of the player with the fewest. Because if the player with the most Happy Beans wins, they will win all my beans in one shot. The player with the fewest, even if they win, will only win me two or three thousand beans, which I can afford to lose.
(So, in real life, don’t let others know how rich you are, or poor people might unite against you.)
8. Each round of Dou Dizhu has a table fee: 400 in low-stakes, 800 in high-stakes, and sometimes even 2,000. This is similar to how a country needs a stable system to recover its currency—through taxes, bank loan interest, or investments. In short, the country needs a stable way to recover the money held by residents.
9. In high-stakes Dou Dizhu, the threshold is 8,000 Happy Beans. For a while, I only needed to accumulate 8,000 Happy Beans in the low-stakes area before immediately moving to the high-stakes area. Relying on this fearless attitude, I won over 100k Happy Beans, but in the end, I lost everything. The bigger the risk, the higher the reward.
At the same time, higher rewards also make it easier to fall back into poverty. In fact, Dou Dizhu has already explained very clearly why it’s so hard for the poor to get rich—it's just that you haven’t truly understood it.