<b>Reported player LTV is inflated 30-50% by survivorship bias</b>
LTV (lifetime value — total NGR a player generates before they stop depositing) is almost always quoted on the wrong denominator.
The common error: averaging LTV only over players who deposited at least twice. That silently deletes the 40-60% of first-time depositors who never return — the cohort that drags real economics down.
Worked example, ~500 FTDs (first-time depositors) in one cohort:
— Reported LTV (multi-depositors only): $340
— True LTV (all FTDs, including one-and-done): $205
That 40% gap is the difference between a CPA (cost per acquisition) of $180 being profitable and being a slow bleed.
Fix your denominator:
— Compute LTV over every FTD, not every active.
— Segment one-and-done as its own line; it's a quality signal on your traffic source.
— Recompute monthly — early cohorts look worse until tail deposits land around month 3-4.
If a network quotes you LTV without stating the denominator, assume it's the flattering one and discount 35%.
Benchmark of the day: true all-FTD LTV typically runs 60-70% of the multi-depositor number operators love to quote.
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<b>Reported player LTV is inflated 30-50% by survivorship bias</b>
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