Martingale
Betting with escalating risks of photo exposure
What You Need
- Smartphone
Method
In this training task, you will gamble with the publication of life-ruining photos for a single orgasm.
First, take a compromising photo similar to the blackmail images in Training Record of R.
Get completely naked and take a photo clearly showing both your face and genitals.
For this training task, it's preferable to have your entire body in the frame.
Spread your legs and arms wide, and adjust so your entire body from head to toe just fills the photo.
Next, divide this image into an 8×8 grid of 64 squares.
Use an app that can create grid divisions, or if you can print it, scissors are fine too.
Each of these squares represents the risk you're betting.
The rules of the game are as follows:
- You will participate in a game with a 50% chance of winning
- Initially, you bet 1 square as your exposure risk
- If you win the bet, you're done and can have an orgasm
- If you lose the bet, you must publish the randomly selected squares you wagered and end without orgasm
- However, you can take on more risk to try again and recover your loss
- A retry requires one edging session and doubling the number of squares bet
You start by betting 1 square, so if you lose, only 1/64th of the photo is published.
However, which square gets published is randomly determined, so in the worst case, it could be a square showing your face.
At this point, you can accept the loss and pay 1 square.
If you accept the loss, you are forbidden from orgasm that day.
If you decide to continue instead of accepting the loss, you must edge once to push yourself further.
Then, you can try again by betting twice as many squares as before.
The bet amount increases exponentially as follows:
- 1st round: 1 square
- 2nd round: 2 squares
- 3rd round: 4 squares
- 4th round: 8 squares
- 5th round: 16 squares
- 6th round: 32 squares
- 7th round: 64 squares
For example, if you lose three times in a row and accept the loss at that point, you pay by publishing 4 randomly selected squares.
If you lose seven times in a row, you bust and cannot continue. You must publish the entire image.
"Publishing" here means making it viewable by third parties who don't know you.
You can upload it to social media or send it to an individual.
The squares to publish are determined by rolling a 1d8 die twice, establishing which column and which row.
If you can edit well, masking all squares except the selected ones with black is ideal.
If that's difficult, simply sending the divided fragments is fine, but in that case, indicate which square number each represents.
(Update: I've created a Martingale tool specifically for this training task, so please feel free to use it)
Any 50% chance game is acceptable, but a simple coin flip might feel the most fateful.
Take this oath: if you lose, you will definitely publish without running away. Then proceed with the betting according to these rules.
Points to Note
The Martingale system is considered a "sure-win" gambling strategy.
In a 50-50 game, if you double your bet each time you lose, when you finally win once, you recover all previous losses.
This is technically true—if you have infinite funds and if your opponent accepts infinite bets.
This training task follows the Martingale method, escalating your risk exponentially when you lose.
Similar to Odds, you stand at the edge of ruin for just one orgasm.
But perhaps as a risk junkie, you'll experience your most intense orgasm when you finally win after being pushed to the seventh round.