The researchers explored how people with problem gambling experienced various interventions. They interviewed 10 adults who were actively seeking help for gambling problems. Participants had sought different types of help for their gambling, including Gamblers Anonymous (GA), online resources, books, mobile apps, cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), and counselling services. The researchers described three main themes related to participants’ experiences with gambling interventions. These themes include (1) “degrees of investment” (i.e., the factors that affected how invested participants were in an intervention); (2) “social comparison” (i.e., how comparing oneself to others could both help and worsen their recovery goals); and (3) “what works” (i.e., different aspects of interventions that participants felt were effective for them). Beyond these themes, the researchers found that participants felt that “experience is expertise.” Participants felt that the experts on recovery are those who have experience with gambling problems instead of trained professionals. Participants talked most positively about GA, in part because it is led by peers with personal experiences in recovery.