Addiction By Design: Machine Gambling In Las Vegas Apr 2026
Natasha Dow Schüll’s is a groundbreaking ethnography that shifts the conversation about gambling from "personal failing" to "industrial engineering."
A trance-like state of "suspended animation" where the player’s sense of time, space, money, and self-identity dissolves. Unlike traditional table games (like poker), machine gambling isn't about winning big; it’s about "the rhythm of play" and staying in the zone as long as possible. Addiction by Design: Machine Gambling in Las Vegas
Based on fifteen years of research in Las Vegas, Schüll explores how the gambling industry—from casino floor layouts to the complex math of slot algorithms—is meticulously engineered to keep players in a state she calls Key Concepts Natasha Dow Schüll’s is a groundbreaking ethnography that
Schüll argues that addicts aren't looking for social interaction or "the glitz of Vegas." They seek a private, digitized escape from the anxieties of daily life. The machine becomes a reliable, predictable partner in a world that feels chaotic. The machine becomes a reliable, predictable partner in




