Fantasy sports is nothing new. For years, people have been getting together to prove that they can draft and field a team of real-life athletes better than their friends. The winners usually take home cash, while the losers get branded as such—sometimes literally.1
It used to be that fantasy sports had to be a season-long commitment. But some people (either on their own or at the urging of their significant others) did not want to take on that type of time commitment or incur the cost of competing in a full-season league. Enter daily fantasy sports (DFS), which gives sports fans a more efficient outlet to achieve the fantasy adrenaline rush by providing competitors with daily or weekly competitions open to almost everyone with an Internet connection.
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