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November 25, 2007

Playing in a Poker Room

Filed under: Featured, Online Gambling, Poker, Tips — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:37 am

As poker continues to increase in popularity, many players are venturing into the poker rooms to play in live games. Playing casino poker is quite different from playing in a home game. There are certain procedures and protocols you will need to understand before you sit down to play.

In a casino, you don’t just walk up to a table and sit down. When you enter the poker room, you must sign in at the desk. You tell the host what game you are interested in playing. If there is an opening, you will be seated immediately. If the table is full, they will take your initials and call you when there is an opening. Some casinos have a large board where they will write your name or initials or they will write your name on a list. Either way you will be called when it is your turn.

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Playing Heads Up Texas Hold’em

Filed under: Online Gambling, Poker, Tips — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 11:36 am

Poker tournaments are very popular and many players are giving them a try after having only played in side games. Playing at the final table of a tournament is different than a side game because as players get knocked out they are no replaced. This means that you must make adjustments for short handed pay. You must adjust more when you get down to two players.

Playing Texas Hold’em Poker heads up against a single opponent requires a completely different strategy than playing at a full table. Many players I have talked to tell me that they have the most difficulty adjusting to playing heads up play and are not very successful when put in that situation. The reason for this is that they are used to playing a very tight game. In a heads up situation you can’t play tight and expect to win.

When you are playing heads up you can’t afford to wait. Many times it comes down to who can steal the most blinds. Therefore you must loosen up and call more or you will go broke. Queen Seven is called the computer hand because computer simulations show this hand is will win 51.77 percent heads up against a random hand. So with this hand or any hand higher than this one you are almost forced to play. A small pair or even a single Ace or King can be a big favorite in heads up play.

Be the Aggressor

A player in the small blind can win by raising with every hand if the player in the big blind keeps folding to a raise. For example: The blinds are $50 and $100 which means there is $150 in the pot. The player on the button is the small blind and must act first before the flop. He raises by putting in an additional $150 bet. If you as the big blind fold, then the small blind has risked $150 to win $150. If you fold half the time the small blind will show a profit. He still will almost certainly profit in these situations since he will not only steal your blind, but will also sometimes win when you call as well.

If you only call in the big blind with a third of the hands that you are dealt. Then the small blind can raise every time and if you call, he can fold if you bet on the flop unless he flops a good hand. When this is the case, he’s going to win $150 two out of three times, plus he’s going to win more sometimes. He’s going to lose the $150 less than one out of three times.

If you find yourself against a player using this strategy you will need to counter it by calling more or raising him. You have to let him know that it could cost him more than $150 if he raises you every time.

Analyze Your Opponent

You need to judge your opponents. Poker at PokerStars.net is a game about making judgments. You need to test the waters by doing the raising and being the aggressor. If you find yourself in a game with a passive player you now know how to beat him. If on the other hand your opponent is also aggressive you will have to use some discretion and very your play. If your opponent is very aggressive you will be able to trap him when you have a good hand. If you check he will more than likely bet and you beat him when he bluffs.

Act First

Playing heads up poker is a lot like playing chicken. This means you will need to bluff more before the flop and sometimes fire away after the flop with nothing. With just two players there will be many times when the flop doesn’t hit either player. Many times it is the person that acts first who will win the pot. Just remember that occasionally your opponent will have a legitimate. Although you don’t want to be bluffed out of a pot on FullTiltPoker.net you will sometimes have to give it up to save your self from elimination.

Chip Stacks

The size of your chip stack makes a big difference in how you play. If you have a big stack you can be much more aggressive as you opponent might be inclined to fold more often waiting for a big hand. While this may work there will be a time when they are forced to make a stand. Although you want to keep the pressure on you also don’t want to double up your opponent too often or you will soon find yourself with the short stack. You have to use selective aggression.

Beware the Limper

Limping in at bodoglive, means to simply call the big blind when a player is in the small blind. Players limp in from the small blind for two reasons. They are either trying to see the flop cheaply or they are trying to trap an aggressive opponent who they hope will raise from the big blind. If you have a big hand in the small blind and know your opponent will raise then you can limp in and try for a check raise. If you know the big blind will always raise if you limp in from the small blind then you must raise first. Your objective in heads up play is to try and extract the most money from your opponent. To do this you will have to mix up your play to keep your opponent guessing.

Practice

Becoming a proficient heads up player requires practice. You can practice at one of the online poker sites, like Full Tilt Poker and PokerStar.net. Get together with a friend for some free practice or enter the small sit and go tournaments to hone your skills.

Until Next time remember: Luck comes and goes…Knowledge Stays Forever.

The Rules Of Texas Hold’em Poker

Filed under: Online Gambling, Poker, Tips — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 11:35 am

Texas Hold’ em poker, also known as Hold’em is the most popular poker game in the world. It is a great game from which to start as it is one of the easiest to learn. The three types of Hold’ em games are the Limit Hold’ em, the Pot Hold’ em and the No-limit Hold’ em.

When you gamble online, position in the hand is marked by a dealer button, placed in front of a player to denote the theoretical dealer. The player on the button gets to act last in all betting rounds which provides him/her an advantage over the opponents. The button moves clockwise to the next active player after each hand is completed.

In a brick or mortar set-up, as opposed to playing poker on FullTilt.net, Texas Hold’em is a form of poker that is generally played with at most 10 opponents at a table. Each player is dealt 2 cards known as their “hole cards” and 5 cards are placed on the table designated as “community cards”. All players share the 5 cards on the table and try to make the best 5 card poker hand using any combination of their cards and the community cards. A player has the option to use all, one or none of their cards to make the best hand possible. The person with the best hand at the end of the round takes the pot.

Winning poker hands are ranked from highest to the lowest which consists of the Royal Flush, Straight Flush, 4 of a Kind, Full House, Flush, Straight, 3 of a Kind, 2 Pairs, 1 Pair and High Card. In case of a tie, the holder of the next-highest card wins. If two players have the same combination of cards such as two straights, the player with the highest ranking card wins. If two players have exactly the same cards in different suits, they divide the winnings as suits have no rank in poker home games.

The dealer button in the actual scenario is a white puck that is moved clockwise to the next player after each hand. As it represents where the dealer would be, this is where the deal begins. The cards will be dealt starting with the player to the immediate left and going around the circle twice giving one card at each pass.

There are two players called “the blinds” who must post a certain amount of money before anyone is given cards. The player to the immediate left of the dealer is known as the “small blind”, while the player to the left of the small blind is known as the “big blind”. This forces at least 2 players to be in the pot and will guarantee action on every hand. The amount of money which these players must post will depend on the type of Hold’ em game. In a $5 to $10 No Limit Hold’ em game, the $5 refers to how much the small blind pays and the $10 refers to how much the big blind pay. The big blind is usually double the small blind.

After the players receive two cards, a round of betting will occur. The 3 cards known as the “flop” will be placed face-up on the table. This will be followed by another round of betting and then 1 more card known as the “turn card” or “4th Street” will be placed face up on the table. Another round of betting follows after which, the 5th and last card known as the “river card” is placed face up on the table. One final round of betting occurs before the remaining players reveal their hands.

Since the blinds are considered to be bets, the first person to act before the flop would be the person to the left of the big blind. This person must put in at least the big blind if he/she wishes to play. The action goes around the circle until the bets are finished. When the game comes down to 2 players left, it is called heads up play. The blind position reverses putting the small blind on the dealer button and the big blind on the role of the other player. This is to prevent giving the dealer an overly unfair advantage preflop and postflop.

Even Quads Can Bring Royal Treatment

Filed under: Poker — Tags: , , — admin @ 11:30 am

Royal flushes at video poker are fairly rare events, occurring once every 40,000 hands or so, depending on the game. Whether you’re playing online or offline, chances are you can find a slot game with a jackpot that occurs more often than that.
Still, video poker is an online gaming staple. That’s because a high frequency of smaller wins and high payback percentages, along with a skill factor unmatched on the slots–is what keeps players coming back.

Some games have an additional factor — a large secondary jackpot that hits much more often than royal flushes. If you’re playing basic Jacks or Better, the 125-credit payoff for five credits wagered isn’t going to get the juices flowing. But what if those quads or worth 250 credits? Or 800? Or 1,200? Or 2,000? All for hands that come up much more often than royals. Makes a difference, doesn’t it?

Double Bonus Poker, for instance, gives you 250 credits for five wagered on four of a kind, 5s through Kings — and the quads come up about once per 622 hands, giving the player reasonable hope in any session. It has even larger payoffs on four 2s, 3s or 4s (400 coins, about once per 1,900 hands) and four Aces (800 coins, once per 5,000 hands). Double Double Bonus Poker, one of the most popular games around, kicks it up a notch with a 2,000-coin jackpot — half the royal flush payoff — on four Aces accompanied by a 2, 3 or 4. That comes up about once every 16,000 hands, 2.5 times as often as a royal.
One favorite game of mine is Super Aces. The secondary jackpot here is 2,000 coins on four Aces, with no low-card kicker needed. For a quarter player, that’s a $500 payoff on a hand that occurs about once per 4,200 hands — nearly 10 times as often as a royal flush.

The full-pay version returns 99.8 percent with expert play and has the following pay table per coin bet: royal flush, 250 (rises to 4,000 coins for a five-coin bet); straight flush, 250; four Aces, 400; four 2s, 3s or 4s, 80; four 5s through Kings, 50; full house, 8; flush, 5; straight, 4; three of a kind, 3; two pair, 1; pair of Jacks or better, 1. If full houses pay only 7-for-1, Super Aces returns 98.7 percent with expert play; drop that full house payback to 6-for-1 and the overall return drops to 97.7 percent.

Strategy requires a few adjustments to account for that big payoff on Aces. Let’s try a few sample hands in full-pay Super Aces.

Ace of hearts, Ace of clubs, 2 of clubs, 3 of clubs, 4 of clubs: In most video poker games, we’ll break up a pair of Aces to hold four parts of a straight flush. That’s even true in Double Double Bonus Poker, with its 2,000-coin jackpot on four Aces with a low card. Not so in Super Aces, where any four-Ace hand nets that big payoff. Here, holding the pair of Aces brings an average return of 12.03 coins per five coins wagered, while holding the four-card straight flush brings an expected return of 11.06 coins.

Ace of diamonds, Jack of clubs, 10 of clubs, 7 of clubs, 2 of hearts: There are four viable choices here–the lone Ace, Ace-Jack, the three-card double-inside straight flush, Jack-10-7 and the two-card royal, Jack-10. We’ll choose differently according to which game and which pay table we’re playing. In Super Aces, the lone Ace is the best choice, with an expected average return of 2.52 coins per five wagered, compared with 2.30 on Jack-10-7.

Ace of clubs, King of diamonds, Queen of hearts, 5 of spades, 2 of spades: With an eye on possible straights, we’ll often keep King-Queen or Ace-King-Queen in other video poker games. Super Aces and Double Double Bonus Poker have something in common in that the Aces are valuable enough that with this start, we keep just the Ace. In Super Aces, the expected return on the Aces is 2.45 coins. The next best option in this game is either Ace-King or Ace-Queen, at an expected return of 2.24 coins. Those plays at least give us a shot at a miracle draw for the other three Aces. And the Aces are what this game is all about.

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