I think a series of these low stakes live games strategy is in order
@bobgeorgiou472
7 жыл бұрын
Maybe you can call it Ask Alec!
@miroslavpantaleev219
7 жыл бұрын
I used to have a tough time adjusting to loose 1/2 games when playing with players that are just there to gamble, and every flop is for at least 3-4 people. Slowly I understood that the only strategy you can apply with this type of game is tighten your range as much as you can. As said, given that you will get to showdown often and you cannot bluff your way to profit, you need hands that are likely to be good at showdown. This video just confirmed the same thing that I found out playing for months, maybe years. I never get sick of saying it: Tight is right! Thanks for the good videos, Alec! Keep up the good work!
@BAlvn-yr6ej
7 жыл бұрын
I'd argue that your use of the word "only" here is questionable. Every player is different..just because a lot of people like to see flops (who doesn't??) doesn't mean they will always continue. You have to pay attention and try to figure out what different players are doing. Position becomes very important post-flop..if four players see the flop and check it to you on the button, very often a pot-sized bet will take it down, or at least reduce the field quite a bit. I think one of the big mistakes people make against loose players is betting too small post-flop...if you bet 1/2 pot or less, no one is going to fold...you gotta apply a lot of pressure..even if you flop top pair top kicker (or bigger) you gotta bet big...slow playing is a disaster, or can often be in my experience.
@ezbob999
5 жыл бұрын
Miroslav Pantaleev bb
@allhailkingryan3598
7 жыл бұрын
This is becoming my favorite youtube channel.
@ClaudioVidalDias
7 жыл бұрын
Man this is exactly what I've needed. My games are so loose and aggressive that I need to really narrow down my range!
@crazydonkey110
7 жыл бұрын
I play in some very loose aggressive $1/$2 cash games. My strategy for this games is to always play in position and raise big with my strong hands even if i raise 5x-7x i usually am still getting action and sometimes even from 2 or 3 players. I limp all my weak hands and try to realize my equity for as cheap as possible when drawing to the nuts because the implied odds are huge in these games. I do not open raise my suited connectors, even when in position for the same reason Alec mentions. However i found that it is ok to 3-bet these hands from in position as players will fold much more often to a c-bet in a 3-bet pot (especially if you 3-bet big).
@oyuyuy
7 жыл бұрын
Sounds very expoitable if there's a single player with his eyes open at the table. I mean, if it works, it works, but I would just raise all hands good enough to raise, and fold all the weak shit. If I limped, I would limp suited aces an pairs, I really doubt limping JTo-ATo is a winning play.
@eole123456789
4 жыл бұрын
This is good advice 👍
@bobgeorgiou472
7 жыл бұрын
IMO There are 3 strategies in these small stakes games. Overall these games are very card dependent so reading the tables are easy and a great place to learn. The first thing you have to learn is which type of game are you at. There are 2 tests. The first is when you hammer the pot, do people fold/can you isolate? The second is how tough or easy can you fold out competition. The first type of table is the toughest to beat let's call this one Omaholdem... the nuts is always out there. These tables are impossible to isolate as the players are not afraid to gamble and they be very sticky with draws and nutted pairs. Aggression here adds variance and if you're catching cards you'll do well, if not it'll get expensive. On these tables I prefer to play a pot control game and get aggressive with the nuts. Play position and stronger ranges into big pots and wider into small ones. Use caution into flushed with small suited connectors. Exploitable? Yes but the skill level of the game, most will not know how to capitalize. The other tough game is where everyone limps but no one calls big bets. Here aggression is 100% the correct. Rob the place blind, pressure later streets, if you get pushback, you're likely beat. Both of these are garbage games. The best game is where you have players who are trying to play the game correctly. You can isolate (but you will still get multiway action) and will get some back play. Tactical aggression and some deception is needed to win (not much). Follow Alec's advice on this game.
@ChinGuan31
7 жыл бұрын
hi bob i was busy with new year etc , good to see you here, this is a common topic that i face and i have share with you before i think i have some way to deal with it , but i personally think playing with this type of opponent is juicy and the variance we face is high because we have to show down more.
@jamesrosa3623
7 жыл бұрын
Bob Georgiou After watching the video, I read this comment and it really is spot on in the games I've played since. As with all poker advice, everything is contingent on the situation and all of that but I think anyone playing the stakes mentioned would be well served reading this comment.
@Xtraderr
7 жыл бұрын
I can relate to this video, I play in a NYC underground poker club in a 1/2 where a standard open is $15 and 5 players call preflop.
@James-xj1cf
7 жыл бұрын
Xtraderr same. I know a 1/2 game like that in Cali. standard open is 12 -16. the max buyin is 1000.
@dimitrismaster
7 жыл бұрын
Xtraderr yeah i feel you,only way to isolate in limpfests is open for 10x bb minimum.If you get more than 2 callers,make it 12x or more next time.i mostly use the 10xbb +pot when many limpers.In crazy games when im short stacked,like 40-60 bb i might even jam in position when many limpers in front with qq+.It sounds stupid but if you know that there is a massive fish maniac station who will pay you off with a weak hand,why not?Of course you ll have bad beats here and there but in the long run if you play TAG and sharpen your postflop game a bit,you ll make money.Avoid tables full of other TAGs or good LAGs.Thats my two cents in fishy low stakes live.
@KevinTorres-pm7kk
7 жыл бұрын
200nl with 1k max? where is this????
@McGavel1
7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tips! Especially cool point about "Charge the most vs people trying to catch a draw if they aren't going to fold because if someone does catch their draw on you at least you charged them the max." That puts into perspective in a new way for me the lack of negative emotion I should have if someone sucks out on me when I laid them terrible odds to try and that over time I'll be exploiting them a lot if they continue to call that way. On the reverse side, I've also found that players in lower stakes tend to be inelastic meaning they don't think about bet size as much as whether or not someone bet when determining the strength of their opponent's hand. Therefore I find that mixing it up and sometimes probe / block betting 1/4 or 1/3 pot on my good draws or 2nd pair type hands helps me buy a lot of free cards for cheap. Additionally if villain only calls my lower probe / block bet then I've found that the lower my bet is, the more likely I'll be able to put in a 1/2 to 3/4 pot bet on brick turns and take the pot right there.
@MelFinehout
7 жыл бұрын
In the Live Low Stakes world skill is shown not in bluffs but in getting max value. Bigger value from a wider range. Ditch the bluffs (all but the very best) and add in WAY more thin value. Some rules: 1) When you are getting value from top pair hands bet massive. eg you raised with 99 and the flop comes A9X over bet. seriously. stack an ace time. 2) Use bet sizing and pot geometry to get them pot-stuck by the river. They do not forecast the future size of the pot. Bet relatively bigger earlier, so later they will call off. (above is an example of this) 3) Value bet very wide (relative to the number of people in the pot) on wet boards. eg you raised KJo and the board runs out J54hh fire three huge barrels. If they will pay of pot sized bets on flop and turn with a draw, and no implied odds, run it up! Then bet small enough on the river to be called by a pair they backed into. 4) When raised by a passive player just fold or jam. They do not raise-fold. They have what they consider the nuts. if you have the actual nuts, raise before the board ruins your action. 5) Watch betting patterns and live tells. They almost always have some and they are often reliable. Don't watch the face. Everyone who can say Rounders knows to have a poker face. watch the body and legs. They don't mix up their play. If a guy jams a draw OTF and checks a set on a wet board-there ya go. There are probably about 10 more. Value, Value, VALUE. Big and thin.
@saundersbruce1
7 жыл бұрын
Excellent advice! We play a 25 / 50 (Thai baht) game in BKK (equivalent to $1 / 2) that plays as you've described. I'd add that 3 and 4 bets pre flop are key to trying to ensure fewer players post flop. Another trend we're seeing is occasional over betting the pot. I know it's not usually correct but some of the crazies in our game still call incorrectly.
@jamespitchforth9928
7 жыл бұрын
[n lower or sats i like to play tight for a few orbits sum up my oppo,then open up alot more playing a wider range and position bluffs on the right players,but not calling much i prefer to be the aggressor, when the blinds get bigger i tighten up abit more keeping the bluffs in position open,loosening up when the bubble gets near and returning to tight player after,every game you have to adjust it to suit the oppo but thats what works for me
@adrianoalves20
7 жыл бұрын
Excellent tips Alec. I was winning in my homegame's cash but now there's a loose crazy player that calls with anything and always hit his cards so I was having trouble with him. I'll apply your tips now.
@ChinGuan31
7 жыл бұрын
hi we have almost same problem
@RackwitzG
4 жыл бұрын
In those multi-way pots you can place bets on what the last player to act will do if it is checked to him. Use that tendency to check raise with best hands. But, I see drawing players even call my pot size check-raises very often. And, variance sorrily lets them beat my sets often enough. Only thing that comforts me then is knowing they must be losing players.
@mcleananderson4948
7 жыл бұрын
Good breakdown Alec, a lot of calling stations at the 2-5 level, kind of shocking because some these games can be pretty large considering the average Americans income. Trying to isolate can be a challenge, even with a 5X open. When you smash a flop, bet it!
@investorjeong
5 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this rlly useful bit of info i was looking for
@marknoble5495
5 жыл бұрын
Great info, but it seems like in these games you have to play 4/5 suited or even off if you are going to get paid. The top premium hands can be really difficult to get isolation. When when you raise big, often times multiple people call with junk looking to bust you.
@fRe3eezY
7 жыл бұрын
Spot on, with a simple explenation. exactly my thoughts, while mooving up and down the stakes this last month. realising my Game is better in the higher stakes, as like to be active and aggressive with suited one gappers on a Button straddle e.g. you helped me in my Overall conclusion. well said and so True. People at lower stakes dont think about ranges and dont fold top pair. e.g. thx for the Video! simple but Spot on!
@lucanoro411
7 жыл бұрын
Funny sidenote. The only reg there misread me twice. Folding QQ assuming i fishingly gave away AA, though i held 72o, and calling with 55 assuming I fishingly bluffed random cards while holding JJ on a 2510 flop. He only saw the one mistake, but at least he paid of the part of his stack he didnt donate to my 7
@DrugsRdaBad1
7 жыл бұрын
How do I adjust to a super tight table as I am a tight aggressive player myself? Do I play more hands and call raises light and try to donk for implied odds?
@LuisTorres-zj3tl
7 жыл бұрын
Kevin play looser on a super tight table. but still aggressive. you should always be raising more often than calling. but in general, however a table is playing, I feel like you probably want to play the opposite. I play loose when the table is tight, and tighten up when the table is loose.
@LuisTorres-zj3tl
7 жыл бұрын
Kevin play looser on a super tight table. but still aggressive. you should always be raising more often than calling. but in general, however a table is playing, I feel like you probably want to play the opposite. I play loose when the table is tight, and tighten up when the table is loose.
@oyuyuy
7 жыл бұрын
Doing the opposite of what everyone else is doing is usually the right thing. Stealing 100% of hands in the cutoff and on the button is really strong versus tight players, versus some, even in the small blind. Second adjustment is just to polarize the shit out of your range. Versus an open, you can just fold any broadway from J10 to AJ and KQ, but play all the pairs and suited connectors. Same goes for your 3bets. Hands like KJo are completely useless versus tight players
@BAlvn-yr6ej
7 жыл бұрын
Good ideas and rationalization, for sure. I'd like to ask you, though, if 4 people on average are seeing flops and you are playing deep enough (let's say 200bb average stack) doesn't playing speculative hands (e.g. suited zero to two gappers, suited aces and kings, 22-99, TJo, etc.) still make sense from a mathematical perspective? Understanding that semi-bluffs won't work often, it seems like still you are getting good pots odds preflop and potentially very good implied odds from these crazy LAG players who might pay you off with just a pair of aces or something. Obvious for shorter stack situations this wouldn't hold up. What's your opinion of that?
@RackwitzG
4 жыл бұрын
Any 2 can win!
@tonyfitton712
7 жыл бұрын
Great Vlog Alex. Great Information to be had... Thanks.
@Samurai31631
7 жыл бұрын
Play from behind To make more money? Call with Ax To see If i hit my Ace? Call a jam against an obvious monster To try To hit a gutshot? Alec is Spot on here. Ppl just say "gamble gamble". ABC And TAG work best
@plasticplanetdiscgolf
7 жыл бұрын
Feel like if you can trap with a set/nuts 1st you can build a stack and then loosen up and get more creative but yeah I noticed my bluffs don't get through at 1/2. 4 spades on the board yep they call w top pair no spade.
@minchello
7 жыл бұрын
Hey Alec I just wanted to see if you could give me some advice. I have been playing online 2c 5c on and off mainly because when I play online I get distracted by so many things that I just end up leaving the tables mainly because I'm a gamer and having my computer in front of me makes me want to play. But my question is if I play online what stakes would be the best to start at. I have been playing 5nl which is fine but I have the money to be able to have a BR to play 1/2 or higher online but I didn't want to rush in and go up to those stakes. What stakes would you recommend to start grinding at online? And also I'm 20 but there is a casino nearby that I could go play live but should I grind online for a while before hitting live? I know live is ALOT slower but I imagine I would enjoy live a little better and maybe play better cause there are less distractions and since its actually in front of you. I really want to get better but I just get distracted easily. What would you recommend?
@oyuyuy
7 жыл бұрын
I play a lot at loose passive full ring tables online. Fish are playing 30/10, regs 15/8. At these tables, I've noticed that no one 3bets or 4bets more than like 3%(a lot of them have less than 2% even). What I do, and what I think is the best strategy, is to just play super aggresive. I play something like 25/20 with 6-7% 3bet, and 20% iso over limps. It's waaay looser than all other regs, but slightly tighter and more balanced than the fish. This way I punish both the loose passive fish, and the overly tight regs. What's important is to only play aggresive IP and never bloat the pot OOP. Just being relentless versus limps and playing huge pots in position is the way to go. I also play a completely different strategy versus the fish than versus the regs. Maybe 10% 3bet versus fish, and 3-4% versus regs.
@edtan9761
10 ай бұрын
but what if you have 5 of these at the table, calling any 10bb or even 20bb pfr? At times even a 60-100bb reshove will be called 4 way if i have qq+
@ryanlee3739
7 жыл бұрын
lol Alex, you should come to Seoul, South Korea where there are a ton of "hold 'em cafes". The most popular blind is $1/$1, where most buy ins range from $50~$200 Now, most people here calls preflop up to $10 (which is 10-20% of a max buy-in) with no problem. "Oh I'm suited I'm calling" "The dude before me just 4 betted, but I got AQ, so it's a snap call" yup.. it's crazy. Because most people are calling stations that always chase their draws, FLUSH at showdown happens like 30% of the time, seriously. I've tried waiting for AA~10/10+ even hit a set but because I play so tight everyone folds when i raise big preflop or when I do get callers I lose to straight or flush. It's really annoying. I guess there is no one right answer when it comes to NLH, but is there a way to minimize losses against people who always chase their flush? I bet big when I hit a top pair to discourage callers but u know what happens? People with flush draw actually just shoves all-in so often thesedays I just let them see the turn card and if flush card doesnt come I shove.. then they are more likely to fold with just river card to come. But this isnt obviously maximizing my profit. Let me know if you get any thoughts on this... thank you. Park
@ChinGuan31
7 жыл бұрын
Stephanie Smith is Korea a good place to explore for poker?
@ryanlee3739
7 жыл бұрын
ChinGuan31 explore?? hell no lol i was an OK player when i played in NY. Here we play it way too aggressively. I mean I will tell you that every pot gets so big theres good money to be made if you are really good. but the variance is too wild since everyone plays like a lunatic..
@truthsmiles
7 жыл бұрын
It would seem to me this is a good time to learn what the odds are of completing flushes in different scenarios, and then sizing your bets appropriately to take advantage. If you believe there's a 30% chance of a flush completing, you (can) win the other 70% of the time against draws.
@theartofcompetition5965
7 жыл бұрын
do these cafe have dealers? or is it just deal for yourself? rake is too hard to beat in low stakes
@BAlvn-yr6ej
7 жыл бұрын
Stephanie Smith i live in South Korea..I am interested in these games. I have played at WH quite a bit and at the Deagu Casino a fair amount too, but I want to try these games. Can you give me some information about how to find them, please? If you want I will give you my email or kakao ID...I'd love to find out.
@the-chillian
7 жыл бұрын
While you're down that way, the regs would probably crap themselves if you showed up at the 1/2 tables at either Garlic City in Gilroy or Bankers in Salinas. At least at Bankers they play just like this. I live in the Santa Cruz Mountains further north, but San Martin is a place I drive through with very little reason to stop there. Maybe I should check it out.
@Stoic777
7 жыл бұрын
My wife used to work at cordevalle! I'm from Gilroy that's pretty cool.
@JDubb51317
5 жыл бұрын
This was actually very beneficial. It actually worked. Difference in play was night and day. Down with the donkeys!! Lol
@stevengrizzle
7 жыл бұрын
This is spot on. Hope people I play with don't see it :)
@BAlvn-yr6ej
7 жыл бұрын
lol..you think recreational players bother studying the game? hell no, they are too busy drinking beers and watching football on the weekends, and treat poker as just another table game or machine in the casino for the most part. at most 1/2 games there is always at least 3 or 4 players that have no real clue about stuff like pot odds. Oh, I have an ace, that's good, right?
@pokerqAK47
7 жыл бұрын
What to do if there are only 4 people and 2 of them are maniacs? I can't play 10-20% hands and they just bet bet reraise all in kinda players. I do it too when everyone plays tight but I fail in crazy short handed live games. I found a solution - to go home, come back tomorrow, find easier games :)
@SmartDevil72
7 жыл бұрын
I´m missing one very important adjustment. Higher bets, higher 3-bets, higher continuation bets, thin value bets!!!
@mjuhazie
7 жыл бұрын
I play in a really weird 1/2 game with a max $100 buy in that is insanely loose. My standard pre flop raise is to $12 (6x) and I can usually expect 3-4 callers. I limit my C-betting since I know bottom pairs or guy draws will always call and flush draws will never ever fold. When I hit a hand and bet it hard these same draws and weak pairs can't wait to pay me off. Sometimes they hit their card bust usually they don't and I average about 4-5 buy in's profit in this weekly game. Raise Big pre flop, and pound it when you hit your hand... that's the recipe. Also, do not go on tilt when they hit their miracle card... you have to feed the fish every now and then or they will die and there won't be any fish in the pond!!! Stay thirsty my friends.
@dreamwalker9308
7 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the vid
@lucanoro411
7 жыл бұрын
Just did my first live cash game session at the equivalent of 2/5 (fiendishly staking a bit too much!), and used some of your wisdom/insight to get in focus before diving in. Granted, the results in no meaningful Way warrants any inferences about future outcomes, but suffice it to say that - despite running card dead - the session went so well that I had to leave to avoid ego-narcissist-tilt from pure succes. Cashed out after 2.5 hours, having been in roughly 18 hands but picking my more committing spots (guided by reads, table dynamics and perceived behavioral misgivings in the surprisingly soft field. The net result was loss of minor pots and wins of more substantial ones, netting an hourly (yeah, yeah: those 2 and a half hourly) rate of 50 bb/100! For what it is worth, the experience was good, and I had your nagging, coachy voice in the back of my head. It got me out of 6 situations that would have resulted in a minus 70bb/100 experience! So, as a micro experiment, I can only praise the poker gods for ensuring that i used your guidance to adjust the variables and fix the my-willpower-internal test conditions. 10/10 would do again (when bankroll allows) :)
@santigoal
7 жыл бұрын
Story of my life :S its really frustrating!
@xMrBoltActionx
7 жыл бұрын
Any tips for running extremely bad for 3 months and going on a huge downswing? Every time Ihave Kings someone has Aces, FH against quads, missing flops a majority of the time, you know...the usual.
@xMrBoltActionx
7 жыл бұрын
Nah legit it has just been all down to card luck, so sick
@allhailkingryan3598
7 жыл бұрын
How many hours have you booked in this time frame? IMO if you run bad for 3 months straight at the 1-2 level it is not unluckiness, you are a losing player period. The faster you accept that, the faster your game will improve. You are not going to improve by lying to yourself.
@xMrBoltActionx
7 жыл бұрын
I only play on Sat nights for a few hours and I am ALWAYS card dead. Haven't had Aces or Kings in three months in live poker lmao like fuck me
@allhailkingryan3598
7 жыл бұрын
Well if you are only playing like 5 hours a week, so 60 hours in a 3 month period then yeah you could run bad for that long. I would still ask myself honestly if there are any leaks in my game or if I am playing bad, if I were in your shoes.
@tiagomota4734
7 жыл бұрын
i think youre bad, no decent players gives these arguments that he runs with kings vs aces ...i heard myself saying that when i was bad thinking i was really good...now im decent i win money i never lose but i know im not good enough....
@mr.bread3circus
7 жыл бұрын
For ONCE, i slightly disagree with Alec. I play $1/1 & $1/3 occasionally. For the group of guys I play with, I apply the strategy mentioned of playing a top tier range to KEEP a certain image. If & when they hold and I find myself up @ least my initial buy-in, I widen my range & try NOT to let hands go to showdown. This way, I take advantage of a board that 'appears' to hit my range with a river bet or 3 C-bets. Since the skill-level is lower, attn to detail may be missed. So my image is that of a tighter player than my actual range is... "When in Rome."
@bobgeorgiou472
7 жыл бұрын
This is a reasonable strategy provided that you don't have people willing to gamble with you and that you have the skills to read a better player's resistance. Guys like me and donkey, who don't respect 1/3 games anymore, are bored by the action, and who's bankroll can't be damaged by the buy ins, we'll run you down using this line. Since we'd be assuming we're the more skilled players, he'd limp call you to death and i'd be doing something I call front running you. In either case, you,d never get players like us out of hands. Point being this only works when you are the more skilled player.
@ChinGuan31
7 жыл бұрын
Donnee Robinson I understand your point , your strategy works because u train your villain to fold to u on those board. When u show them enough value hand in the show down, they will adapt and change , this is the point we can gear shift and open our range
@ChinGuan31
7 жыл бұрын
Bob Georgiou so the way to counter u and Donkey, always show up value hand and value bet aggressively till either u change, and stop paying hero off or I will stick to pure pure value play =). Doesn't know does it work. As we can always ctrl when to bluff but it's hard to ctrl when to value.
@mr.bread3circus
7 жыл бұрын
ChinGuan31 Exactly!! If your opponent can put you on a range, you're @ a disadvantage. At lower stakes, ppl aren't necessarily paying attn to the fact you called a preflop raise, from the button, with a mediocre suited hand, based on the math. They tend to rmbr you raking in pots with winning hands. Perception is important IMO. Because it's a persons reality. IMO, when it comes to poker, you absolutely HAVE to be able to switch gears.
@bobgeorgiou472
7 жыл бұрын
Guys: better players don't payoff those bets. Better players read and adjust and since these games are so bad that playing balanced iis nearly impossible because EVERY hand is a value hand on the river. That's why it's called Omaholdem. If there are no good players then no one gives action. That's why both of those games are trash.
@garygwinn4256
7 жыл бұрын
Yah us low-rollers gotta play that way. The money in loose, low stakes games is mostly fun-money, so you gotta charge em for their bad play
@erick938
7 жыл бұрын
ALEC am I the biggest nit ever?? bought into a 1/2 for 200. I come to a table with very deep stacks (700+) and get AK the FIRST hand. raised to 10, raised to 70, raised all in preflop. I JUST sat down, thought about 30 seconds and folded. i didn't wanna get knocked out immediately but instantly regretted it when I flopped top pair. winner never showed but claims he had pocket 7s
@fundiver198
7 жыл бұрын
Its certainly not standard to get it all in preflop with AK 100 BB deep. And especially not if you are going to call a shove from another player and have no information about him. So no folding AK in that situation is not nitty. It is in fact a complete standard play, which does not even require thinking about it at all.
@mikeatgoogle501
7 жыл бұрын
The problem is, your numbers don't add up.
@plasticplanetdiscgolf
7 жыл бұрын
Heisenberg Heisenberg Yeah I played a table like that were they just care about the pot odds and are know they're trying to suck out. Rich dudes I guess that just love to gamble.
@FeelinGoode
7 жыл бұрын
What if you are playing against good LAG players at higher stakes? Wouldn't playing a linear range make you too easy to play against? What do you do if you are card dead against these players?
@GuRuGeorge03
7 жыл бұрын
a good LAG style is the best possible strategy known to date so it won't matter what you do vs these opponents. u go break even vs them at best and lose the rake. just straight up avoid those players and look for weaker opponents
@terracottapie
7 жыл бұрын
He literally said that this is specific advice about playing small stakes cash games. He's not suggesting to play a linear range against good LAGs in high stakes games and explicitly said the opposite.
@tiagomota4734
7 жыл бұрын
+ feelingood did you even watched the fkin video?
@david_blomquist131
6 жыл бұрын
Playing poker in idaho is a little different. You gotta expect bad players to constantly raise you. If you think ever about something, they see it as weakness and they'll raise you. If your patient, they soon loose and quit
@ConsciousPoker
6 жыл бұрын
Good observation, important to notice how games play differently in different places.
@jamesyork4487
7 жыл бұрын
I play 1/3 NLH here in MS at Vicksburg, very soft tables. Most of these guys play way too many hands and call way too many bets. They want to make calls so it is an easy winning strategy to bluff less and value bet more. Against a hyper aggro guy just give him rope and make a stand with your top range hands on each street. It's not that hard to beat these stakes.
@russminer4886
7 жыл бұрын
whata up from Vegas I noticed European people bluff more, is that true or is it just me that's just my experience from playing at the Venetian thanks bud
@stephenclark5812
6 жыл бұрын
I like your videos, but my God man it is FEWER callers, options, etc.
@disisaz
6 жыл бұрын
You made that sound so simple, it's kind of frustrating to accept it but it's true! Just fuckin' ABC man! I lost so much time, effort & money trying to make plays :D without HUD lol
@terracottapie
7 жыл бұрын
TL;DR: "Move up to where they respect your raises." I'm just kidding, this is actually really good advice. I just thought that was funny.
@markpham4044
7 жыл бұрын
When face with these type of players at any table, the boring conventional ABC position poker always TRIUMP!
@kostasvrinias7147
7 жыл бұрын
And the big question is: Can u win this type of games?
@stasyszy
7 жыл бұрын
any type of game is winnable, only things that change are the variance and strategy
@RackwitzG
4 жыл бұрын
You must win 5+bb/100 to beat the rake alone. Good luck.
@lucanoro411
7 жыл бұрын
(Was probably in less than 18... 12 may be closer to the truth, but whatever).
@stasyszy
7 жыл бұрын
why do people say, "im not being paid to say this" ? who cares what others think ^
@OldieBones
7 жыл бұрын
They lose credibility if people suspect they're being paid.
@stasyszy
7 жыл бұрын
cause people cant think critically to either tell the difference between good/bad advice, or properly understand sponsorship
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