Although I like having an overall $100k prize, I have otherwise argued in general for more flatness in the fantasy prize structure because it keeps more teams in the game (as does a higher % payout, of course).
Running a random simulation based on last year's Main Event prize structure, assuming you play in 30 main events over a career, this is what I came up with ...
For each 15 team Main Event league:
• 1 team will realize a net return on investment (ROI) of 300-400%
• 1 team will realize about a 50% ROI
• 1 team will be close to breakeven
• 12 teams will lose at least 15% of their investment
If all teams are equally skilled, these simulated results should be in the ballpark. If I run the same results but assume that 3 teams in each league are clearly inferior and cannot get into the money, then 2 teams in each league reach breakeven and 11 still lose at least 15%.
Running this simulation for the Diamond, a single league with no "overall" contest:
• 3 teams realize an ROI of about 50%
• 3 additional teams are profitable
• 2 teams are close to breakeven
• 7 teams lose at least 15%
No real point to this other than curiosity, and I know how much Dough loves seeing stats.
