If he was playing poker at his local eagles every Sunday and heard what is the red worth 20x a session there is no way he makes his argument
Then you skimmed the thread.
I already stated more than once that I play in various non-casino games besides my own, including both private and social hall games (held variously at a VFW, an American Legion Hall, a Catholic Benevolent Association—formerly played in a synagogue!—and a firehouse).
And I noted that only one of these uses denominated chips.
In the home games I play in, only one uses denoms (cheap ones, which anyone could buy online for nothing, if they wanted to cheat by sneaking in chips... So much for security).
As also stated, these games are populated overwhelmingly by regs. New faces show up, but after 2-3 sessions at such venues, you will recognize pretty much everyone. As already stated.
But yes: Distracted, amateur players ask lots of questions in games. I’d say by far the most common, by a longshot, is the infamous
“What are the blinds?”
Yet we don't print the blind structure on the table surfaces, and games are usually set up in such a way that maybe 15-20% of seats at best have any chance of seeing the clock.
People ask this question even when it was just announced seconds beforehand “Blinds are up, 200/400!” and sometimes even when the same question was asked on
each of the previous three hands.
The next most common question is
“Is it on me?”
Followed by
“How much is the bet?” (right after the previous player said, “raise to [#####]”)
Then you get to legit questions like
“How much do you have behind?”
I’d guesstimate that accounts for about 98% of CPQs (Confused Player Questions—my new term! Do try to keep up!)
If the question
“How much is this chip worth?” comes up at all in these games, it is (a) rare in comparison to the above, (b) usually from a new player who doesn't come back, and (c) something that occurs in the early levels, where confusion is less costly.
So, sorry to spoil your lecture about not attending social hall games (note: the subj is home games, but it drifted lots of other places). I can't help it if you draw conclusions without actually reading.