A man in the US sues DraftKings (a sportsbook) after claiming that the sportsbook led him to gamble away millions of dollars. According to the article, the attorney the guy hired claims that the sportsbook VIP hosts bombarded the guy with calls, emails and other forms of communication, which contributed to his growing addiction, which ultimately led him to gamble the money he saved for his wedding and took out loans to feed his gambling addiction.
Sometimes interesting and very funny things happen in the gambling industry.

What would happen if all the gamblers started suing casinos and bookmakers?

I like the wording "forced" in this story.

I can just picture this client being forced to place bets by bookmaker employees under psychological and physical pressure.

This is absurd.
How easy it is to blame others for your mistakes and weaknesses. Everyone else is always to blame, never yourself.
By the way, if this person was fired from their job, it means they weren't up to the job. Is the betting to blame again?

The article also said that the guy's father of the guy tried to convince him to request self-exclusion in their state, but the guy declined it.
Isn't this a reason for the court to rule in favor of the bookmaker?
The addiction got so bad that the guy wrote a suicide note.
But not enough to actually implement it, right? Isn't this just part of the acting game, designed to win the case in their favor?
Currently, the guy is still in recovery, has a job now, and is married and has a child with his wife.
It's astonishing. What normal woman would agree to marry and have a child with a man with the aforementioned diagnoses and completely inappropriate behavior? Is she hoping he'll win the case in court?

What's your view on this?
There's so much drama in this story that you could make a tv series.

Personally, I think the guy should be held accountable for his actions, but in the article, the sportsbook sounded like they were extremely aggressive in their promotion to this guy, I mean, getting bombarded by calls, emails, and other forms of communication is a bit excessive.
Every gambler should be held accountable for their actions, not rush to court after losses. If bookmaker employees who overly pushed their services are held accountable, then sue all the world's marketers, PR people, and advertisers. After all, they, too, "force" us to do things we don't want to do.
