yeah, I think where ultra's analogy breaks down is an employee-employer have informed consent. Neither is tricking the other. And if one of them doesn't like the arrangement and feels he's been duped, he can walk away at any time. You can't quit in the middle of a set if you find out you've been tricked, at least not without some trouble.
We're just arguing over labels, I don't hear the term "money player" used a lot, just "yeah he'll play for something" or "he gambles at pool". Both are gambling because even the lock artist can get fooled and make a bad game sometimes, and everyone gets bad rolls. So I'd just call both gamblers, one is just tighter (or let's just say it, nittier) than the other.
We're just arguing over labels, I don't hear the term "money player" used a lot, just "yeah he'll play for something" or "he gambles at pool". Both are gambling because even the lock artist can get fooled and make a bad game sometimes, and everyone gets bad rolls. So I'd just call both gamblers, one is just tighter (or let's just say it, nittier) than the other.