Home Blog Page 116

SocialPoker – Live No Limit Holdem Poker Cash Game

0

The SocialPoker is open 7 days in a week from dusk till dawn and is one of the best home poker rooms in the Heart of Midtown, New York; it features a clean, safe & friendly environment with live poker action With a range of exciting Poker games, including No Limit Hold’em, Pot Limit Omaha, and weekly tournament, you can enjoy Poker any day of the week.

NL Holdem Cash Games at Socialpoker

Check Out our daily cash game and tournament schedule. Stop by and let us know how we’re doing or what you may be interested in having us add to our room. Why play anywhere else?

  • $1/$2 No Limit Holdem (Buyin $80-$500)
  • $2/$5 No Limit Holdem (Buyin $300-$2000)
  • $5/$5 Pot Limit Omaha.

Bonuses:

  • A bonus is like a coupon, if you don’t say anything about your bonus/coupon.
  • 10% Early Bird Bonus.
  • BONUS REQUIREMENTS: Minimum 3 hours session.

Poker Tournaments:

  • $250 Dollars Poker Tournament
  • Buy-in: $210+$40
  • Prize Pool: $210 is going towards Pool Prize 1st place 55%, 2nd place 30% and $40 is going Towards, House, Dealers, Food.
  • Registration Close at Break-Time!!!
  • STRUCTURE” 10k Starting Stack
  • 15 Minute Level

How to get a seat:

All it takes to get a seat is registering via text/our website. If you don’t registered yet, just click the link below! or Text “SPblog” to (347) 471 1813 with full name, email & occupation.

 

Poker Cash Game at Midtown, Manhattan

0

Our Poker Room offers No Limit Texas Hold’em Cash Games and Poker Tournament for player of all levels so you are sure to find a game to suit you. There’s no better deal in the New York City! Interested in Live Action? We have the following cash game daily.

$1/$2 No Limit Holdem (Buy-in: Min 80 Max 500.)

$2/$5 No Limit Holdem (Buy-in: Min 300 Max 2000.)

$5/$5 Pot Limit Omaha.

How to get a seat:

All it takes to get a seat is registering via text/our website. If you don’t registered yet, just click the link below! or Text “SPblog” to (347) 471 1813 with full name, email & occupation.

 

Midtown Live! Poker Club. Why play anywhere else?

0

SocialPoker features a clean, safe & friendly environment with live poker action in varying No Limit Hold’em, Pot Limit Omaha, and weekly tournament. We’re open every day from dusk till dawn in the New York City. Check Out our daily cash game and tournament schedule. Stop by and let us know how we’re doing or what you may be interested in having us add to our room. Why play anywhere else?

Low Stake Poker Room:

  • Low Stake: 1/2 #NLHE
  • Buy-in: Min 80 Max 500.
  • Mon – Fri @4pm. Sat – Sun @2pm.

DeepStake Poker Room:

  • DeepStake: 2/5 #NLHE
  • Buy-in: Min 300 Max 2000.
  • Mon – Fri @3pm. Sat – Sun @6pm.

BONUSES:

  • A bonus is like a coupon, if you don’t say anything about your bonus/coupon.
  • 10% Early Bird Bonus.
  • BONUS REQUIREMENTS: Minimum 3 hours session.

Poker Tournaments:

  • $250 Dollars Poker Tournament
  • Buy-in: $210+$40
  • Prize Pool: $210 is going towards Pool Prize 1st place 55%, 2nd place 30% and $40 is going Towards, House, Dealers, Food.
  • Registration Close at Break-Time!!!
  • STRUCTURE” 10k Starting Stack
  • 15 Minute Level

How to get a seat:

All it takes to get a seat is registering via text/our website. If you don’t registered yet, just click the link below! or Text “SPblog” to (347) 471 1813 with full name, email & occupation.

 

 

How To Make Your Poker Game Less Exploitable? – Robert Woolley

0

 

One of my favorite memories from my years living in Las Vegas had almost nothing to do with poker. I joined a pub trivia team. We did well enough to advance to the city-wide finals. Eleven teams were competing for three cash prizes. Even after the tiebreakers, we were tied with another team for third place. The emcee announced that it would be settled by a game of Rock-Paper-Scissors, or “Roshambo.”

You know the game, I trust. Following a count of three, two players simultaneously “throw” their choice of either Rock (a fist), Paper (a flat hand), or Scissors (two fingers), with rock beating scissors, scissors beating paper, and paper beating rock.

I had done some reading on RPS strategy, because it turns out to have some deep connections to poker strategy. One of the most basic facts is that inexperienced players tend to go Rock on their first throw. This tendency is particularly pronounced among males. (Perhaps they naively believe, like Bart Simpson, “Nothing beats Rock.”)

As our team representative stood to go to the front of the room for the contest — which consisted of just a single throw — I whispered to him, “Go with Paper.” He did. The man from the other team went Rock, per the stereotype, and we won the money.

I’m reminded of this now because I just learned of a major new piece of research on RPS. It was published in February in Nature, one of the most prestigious science journals in the world.

The study pitted human players against a computer opponent. The results can be summarized with these bullet points:

The human players threw Rock more than Paper or Scissors.
After a win, players tend to stay with the same selection for the next throw.
After a loss, players tend to switch — and they preferentially switch to the choice that would have won in the throw they just lost. E.g., after playing Rock and losing to Paper, they switch to Scissors, which beats Paper.
After a draw (when both players throw the same), players tend to switch — and again they preferentially switch to the choice that would have won in the draw. E.g., after a Rock-Rock draw, they switch to Paper, which beats Rock.
This makes perfect sense from the standpoint of basic human psychology. After feeling the sting of a loss, we don’t want to repeat it, so we make a different choice. When there are only two other options available, of course we’ll tend to choose the one that would have won if we had played it in the round just finished. It looks like a winner, so that’s what we go with. It’s also a way of feeling like we’re correcting a mistake. Read Full article @pokernews.com by Robert Woolley

Floating vs. Bluff-Raising with Andrew Seidman

0

Andrew Seidman: First and foremost, against a weaker opponent, I’m probably not looking to bluff too much because I’m going to end up at showdown. So if I flop a draw, I’ll just call and not raise. If I flop nothing, I’ll just fold. Weaker opponents make it easy on you.

Preflop, a big thing that goes into my decision-making over whether to flat or reraise would be the people in the blinds. My range would be a lot wider for flatting preflop if there were weaker players in the blinds where I could get better value by flatting and hoping to play a pot with them than I could by three-betting the original raiser.

Let’s say we have a fish in the blinds and a reg opens, and I call my wide range on the button and the fish folds. Then the first question I’m asking myself when facing the continuation bet is how often does this guy c-bet against me? This is an important question that goes beyond stats. If I see him check-fold against me, or check-call some weak top pair or second pair or something, those affect whether or not I’ll play back, and how I’ll do it. Read Full @pokernews.com

How to Amass a Big Stack Early in a Poker Tournament

0

In all my years of tournament reporting, I have never seen anyone amass chips early in poker tournaments as consistently as Mid-States Poker Tour Team Pro Blake Bohn and online poker legend Mark “P0ker H0” Kroon. Both are “go-big-or-go-home players,” meaning they’re not afraid to bust if it gives them a shot at the chip lead. Oftentimes they do, but in those instances they don’t they nearly always find themselves the big stack in the room.

 

Full Read @Pokernews.com

Protecting Your Stack vs. Maximizing Value

0

We are staying with the same World Series of Poker event from last year for this week’s hand analysis, another one from Event #25: $5,000 No-Limit Hold’em Eight Handed, a tournament I managed to final table.

The first three hands we’ve discussed all came from the first day of the event, while this one happened on Day 2 during Level 14 (1,200/2,400/400). At this point we were nearing the bubble, which usually means players with middle and short stacks tighten up.

Even though I found a strong hand in {10-Hearts}{10-Spades}, I decided to proceed cautiously here when facing an early position raise from an unknown 35-year-old opponent playing a relatively short stack.

It is important to realize when you can happily pile your stack in with pocket tens and when you should take the conservative route. As you’ll see, I took the latter approach in this hand — deciding to protect my stack rather than look to maximize value — and even though I lost the pot, it wasn’t too costly. Take a look:

Could I have done anything differently in this hand? How would you have played it? Did my opponent play the hand well or might he have done anything to get more chips? Let me know your thoughts in a comment below. Source: Pokernews.com

Six Kinds of Players Are Taking in the Flop: Which Are You?

0

This entire article is about a roughly two-second-long window of time that occurs in every hand of hold’em and Omaha. It’s the moment that the three flop cards are revealed. I’ve noticed six distinct ways that people behave in this brief interval.

1. The Watcher
2. The Robot
3. The Watcher Watcher
4. The Glancer
5. The Drama Queen
6. The Reverser

The most important thing is to be aware of and in control of what you’re doing — every time, and with every flop.

So when the flop comes, which of these six are you? Read Full Articles @pokernews.com/strategy

Live Low Stakes and Deep stakes Poker Cash Games in Midtown, Manhattan.

0

Everybody loves poker. When you play poker at online you can only play the most popular poker games. When you play in a home poker game with your associates you can play lot of different dealer choice poker games ranging from stud poker games to wild card poker games.

If you’re a person who likes to come and go as they please and looking for a quick fix of fun, we’ve got cash games in different shapes and sizes running daily.

Clean. Safe . Friendly. Poker Club in Midtown.

Check Out our daily cash game and tournament schedule. Stop by and let us know how we’re doing or what you may be interested in having us add to our room. Why play anywhere else?

Low Stake Poker:

  • Low Stake: 1/2 #NLHE
  • Buy-in: Min 80 Max 500.
  • Mon – Fri @4pm. Sat – Sun @2pm.

Deep Stake Poker:

  • Deep Stake: 2/5 #NLHE
  • Buy-in: Min 300 Max 2000.
  • Mon – Fri @3pm. Sat – Sun @6pm.

Check out what you’ll get when you join!

  • A bonus is like a coupon, if you don’t say anything about your bonus/coupon.
  • 10% Early Bird Bonus.
  • BONUS REQUIREMENTS: Minimum 3 hours session.

How to get a seat:

All it takes to get a seat is registering via text/our website. If you don’t registered yet, just click the link below! or Text “SPblog” to (347) 471 1813 with full name, email & occupation.

 

High Stakes Poker Room in Midtown

0

We are committed to bringing you exclusive, safe & secure poker rooms, located in the best places of the City. There is no doubt, that you will find a lot of find high stakes poker room searching on google. We have decorated our place. Now it’s your turn to get in on the action, right?

High Stakes Poker Room:

  • High Stake: 2/5 #NLHE
  • Buy-in: Min 300 Max 2000.
  • Mon – Fri @3pm. Sat – Sun @6pm.

BONUSES:

  • A bonus is like a coupon, if you don’t say anything about your bonus/coupon.
  • 10% Early Bird Bonus.
  • $75 First Time Bonus.
  • BONUS REQUIREMENTS: Minimum 3 hours session.

How to get a seat:

All it takes to get a seat is registering via text/our website. If you don’t registered yet, just click the link below! or Text “SPblog” to (347) 471 1813 with full name, email & occupation.

 

MOST POPULAR

HOT NEWS