Geeks and Poker? 657
Best ID Ever! asks: "Poker, a fascinating intersection of math, game theory, and observation of human behavior, is currently exploding in popularity due to televised high-stakes tournaments such as the World Poker Tour and Binion's 2003 World Series of Poker. Many of today's top professional players have nerdly roots such as Mathematicians, chess prodigies, or backgammon champions. A few pros, including 2000 champion Chris Ferguson, even used to play poker in the IRC poker community. This year's World Series final event, which began Saturday and lasts through the week, drew 2600 participants, more than three times the number of participants in 2003. How many Slashdot readers play poker, and what do you think of Poker's upswing?"
Personally... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Personally... (Score:5, Insightful)
Poker advise (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Read "Bringing Down the House" (Score:5, Insightful)
also, Bringing Down The House was about blackjack, not poker
The Feel of the Cards (Score:3, Insightful)
What I love about Poker (and why I am happy it is gaining in popularity) is simply the "reality" of it in that you have real cards, real chips and potentially even real money in your hands. I am contrasting this to the computerized or synthetic elements of online poker or poker video games.
Re:fun, but stupid (Score:1, Insightful)
So I guess that means... (Score:1, Insightful)
That's absurd. Part of the appeal of poker is the that "one cannot really control it." But that doesn't mean you're flipping a coin whenever you play.
In fact, poker is a great test of a person's ability to "experience" statistics and probability first-hand... and yet continue to ignore it.
For instance, if you're holding two suited cards in a hold'em game, you've got a 20% chance of the board giving you a flush. But if you got lucky the last time you foolishly played for that result and that result only, you might be convinced you made the correct decision the next hundred times you're faced with the same situation.
You are also completely forgetting about the concept of bluffing in your one sentence assessment of poker.
I'd invite you to play a few sessions with my group, but it just might reinforce your belief in minimizing losses.
Re:Personally... (Score:2, Insightful)
Yes, that, and if they do notice somebody who's good at it, they'll start shuffling the deck much more often than usual, resetting any advantage that he might have had...
Re:Personally... (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with professional poker, take 2 (Score:5, Insightful)
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I used to play quite a bit of structured-bet poker in the California card rooms. In California, as opposed to Nevada, the card rooms are smoke free, and the competition is *usually* pretty weak.
At tables up to about the 6-12 or sometimes 10-20 range, almost all deals will see a flop. A lot of people will play any pair, regardless of position, and will often play any face card. In Vegas, more people know what they're doing, and a lot of times the deal will be folded around to the blinds.
So, in my opinion, California is about as accomodating a place to play as there is, and I got to a point where I could consistently win about $15/hr, over the long run. Not great, but not bad. More practice and higher table limits probably would have improved this number.
The problem is that it just gets SO. INCREDIBLY. BORING. If you're playing well, you're going to be folding most of your initial hands because they're just not worth playing. There have been hours where I've sat there and folded all 35 hands that are dealt. For a while you can watch the other players and learn their styles, but when you realize that two guys at the table will play anything to the flop, including 2-7 offsuit, there's not a whole lot else you need to know except that those two people suck and you should be ready to exploit their weakness.
Some poker books have stories about men who cut the pockets out of their pants, so they can masturbate at the tables. Perhaps my boredom threshold for masturbating in public is higher, or maybe I just didn't stick with poker long enough, but my decision was that that lifestyle wasn't really the way I wanted to spend my life.
For $15/hr, there are a lot of other jobs that don't revolve around being bored and taking other people's rent money. (Yes, I know you shouldn't play with rent money. A lot of people do. And those are usually the players who suck, and who are losing their money to you.)
Pot-limit and no-limit are completely different animals, but the risk in those games is enormous. It's trivially easy to lose your entire bankroll in one night.
Todd
Re:Poker advise (Score:5, Insightful)
If you cannot beat the newbs consistently, no matter how many of them there are, you've no business playing the game.
Repeat after me: good players get more bad beats because they only tend to enter the game with very premium hands. Good players make more money over time than bad.
You simply have to alter your strategy to deal with loose players and they are your bread and butter. You should be very friendly and encouraging to loose callers because they're like little trees of money.
No, you face a much worse threat from a tight aggressive player.
Re:BOTH RIGHT! -- Facts included. (Score:4, Insightful)
Therefore we can both be right.
HOWEVER- I quallify my statement by saying that my knowledge is now 6 years old. Your numbers sound just about right, though- the further away from the strip you go, the better chance you have to win, and this too is advertising-related.
Note also how the casinos are VERY carefull not to let this show up in the published statistics- erring a bit on the side of caution with all nickle machines.
Re:"How many Slashdot readers play poker"?? (Score:3, Insightful)
I know that was probably meant as a joke, but I want to be serious for a sec. I'm a fairly serious gamer.
That's the sign of a gaming problem.
I play a good deal. But all the money I use to play with is money that I don't need to pay for food, clothes, bills, car, etc.
I've seen people go broke playing. Not just poker, but any game. Hell, I wouldn't doubt that a few of the 2,576 that signed up for the WSOP Main Event put up money they couldn't afford.
Some people just can't stand up from the table.
If you're playing to the point where you can't cover your costs of living, then you really REALLY should talk to someone, like Gamblers' Anonymous, or call your state's gaming problem help line.
Don't mean to be a total buzzkill, but I seriously don't want to win someone's rent money or the money she needs to feed her kids.
Re:Hold'em (Score:5, Insightful)
The only way to win consistanty is to play rationally (ie. mathematically) against people who are not playing rationally.
This is misleading. In order to beat people who are playing "irrationally", you must also play "irrationally". Let me explain what I mean by this.
There is no "Optimal strategy" in poker. There is a good strategy for a specific situation against specific players, but there is no single strategy that can always be applied.
If you always play "rationally (mathematically)", then that means you are not varying your game; then your opponents can read you like an open book. Then they can bluff at you when you check, because "rationally", you check when you have nothing. So this isn't a good way to do it.
When players start out, they usually play "rationally", i.e. they are always thinking about math and odds. The truth is that you have to vary your plays, sometimes doing "irrational" things like betting when you don't have a hand or have an incomplete hand. The reason i call this irrational is that, a rational opponent could turn around and exploit your sub-optimal play. However, you play sub-optimally precisely because you know your opponent is weak and will not exploit your play.
I'll use an analogy to explain this phenomenon. In a game of paper-rock-scissors, the mathematically optimal (rational) strategy is to play randomly. And your analysis of random vs random is correct.. no one wins. However, if your opponent plays "irrationally" (exhibits patterns), then you must also play "sub-optimally" to exploit these patterns. In doing so you will exhibit patterns of your own. If your opponent is playing 66% rocks, you would do well to play lots of papers. Now, if your opponent is rational, he would just start playing scissor instead. But precisely because he continues to play suboptimally (66% rocks), you continue playing papers. Poker is a more complex game, which is why people actually make mistakes of this magnitude at poker and why people don't play paper-rock-scissors for money.
The reason you can win at poker is that players are always betting the value of the cards in their hand. To win at poker, you have to take into account more than your cards and the odds of the next card hitting; you have to bet your position at the table, and you have to bet based on the other player's cards. Bad players will tell you what they have with the size of their bets. Now that you have more information than they do, you can eat them alive.
Re:Personally... (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course not. Casinos are places where suckers are separated from their money. Is there anybody stupid enough to think it's anything different?
Chris Mattern
Re:Dunno - newbie pack is formidible (Score:5, Insightful)
Newbies around the table hold bullshit-crap
Someone is going to get two pair out of the board. You have to hope for another ace or a pair on the board. If that pair does show up, it likely gives trip-bullshit to one of the 7 implacable newbs.
Your question does not have a short answer. AA is not as good as you think. If all 9 of your opponents stayed in til the river card, it would only win 30% of the time! Granted, your odds before the flop are better than anyone elses, but this means that there are on average seven people sitting at the table that would beat you if they stayed in.
You shouldn't think of yourself as entitled to win that hand, you should try to maximize your value when you win it.
In a tournament setting, going all in with AA pre flop can be a pretty good move, but it's not always how you should play it. Just make a big raise to try to get some people out, and if you have a big re-raiser, then consider going all in.
Having a few punters call your big bet is not a bad thing. It means that the times you do win the hand, you will win more money on average as a result.
Of course, it's not that simple in a tournament, because you also must take your relative stack size into account. If there are still 2500 people in the tournament, someone has a stack ten times your size at the table, you might want to think twice about pushing your advantage too hard. You should almost never fold AA pre flop (though there are very very very rare situations where it is a good idea), but AA is only an 87% winner against a random hand.
Your goal in a proportional payout (pays out to x place, as opposed to a winner-take-all) tournament is to survive as long as possible, NOT to press every little advantage to the limit. This means that, while you must be aggressive, you don't want to risk all your chips early on if you can help it.
In some tournaments (particularly online), you could probably outlast half the field just by folding every hand. Realize this, and take some risks, but try skate your way to the final table, not bludgeon your way there.
In a winner take all tournament, the gloves are off, and you *should* play every little edge to the maximum. This means that you will lose early a lot, but also that you will win more often than you should.
Vegas pawn shops.... (thats pawn not pr0n!) (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to leave Vegas with a small fortune, start with a large fortune.
And spend it in the pawn shops when you are there.
So many people literlay loose the shirt off there back [1] and are reduced to hocking cameras, guns etc. These can be bought very cheaply from pawnbrokers. Coupled with very cheep rooms (+ suites) and free shows to lure in gamblers, you can come away with more monney than you spend if you dont gamble!
[1]I even saw a tux in a pawn shop there.
Trouble was it was typical vegas XXXXXL fat bastard size.
poker & social engineering (Score:2, Insightful)
#1, blackjack basically is a "total luck" game once you've got a handle on basic strategy and counting... it just becomes a matter of whether or not you get an opportunity to put your counting skills to good use, and then not getting booted from the casino...
but poker, at least over beers with your mates, is basically social engineering... and the better you know the folks you're playing, the more interesting the game is...
as i side note, i generally have only played poker with my non-geeky friends, which is a coincidence, not a choice
Skill in Hold'Em ( was: Re: Personally..) (Score:3, Insightful)
Going all-in with The HAMMER! (7-2 offsuit) isn't necessarily a bad play, especially when you think your opponants got dealt crap. Going all-in with aces isn't necessarily a good play, if there's someone you suspect may have a decent hand and you wish to get all the chips you can out of him.
Skill in betting is precisely a mathematical skill. At the least, you need to know what odds you're getting and giving for that bet. (EX: 100k bet into a 1M pot = 10:1 pot odds.) Flashing through exactly which hands can beat yours, and the odds that your opponant has it, is also tricky. (EX: I have Q-9 off. Board reads 6-7-Q-8-T, rainbow. What beats my hand? A J-9.)
If no skill were involved, then each final table would be completely different and random... but you look at the leader boards, and a few faces keep coming to the top. Games of skill have a cream of the crop. Games of chance, by nature, can't.
Re:Personally... (Score:4, Insightful)
First person to have said the most important point - go to the casinos for fun. Assume all of your budgeted money will go to the house. Consider it an amusement park where your bets are the admission fee.