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Most of the players playing online casino poker constantly grows, as does the number of cardrooms. But strategy for online casino poker is still only in its adolescence. This Guide was the first of its kind when put online. It is my attempt to fill a void in casino poker literature. This Guide is geared both for players who have never played a hand online as well as those with experience who want to learn to play better -- to win, or win more. Experienced users can skip some of the basics, but even in discussions of the basics I hope experienced users find some valuable ideas. Also, many of the linked pages below offer other information that should contribute to helping you win.
Since little has been written specifically on how to beat online games, why am I? Why give away "secrets"? First, I want to encourage more and more people to enjoy casino poker in all its forms. Some new players, too far away or too intimidated to walk into a conventional cardroom, will be glad to start out in a relatively unthreatening online environment. Online free games represent the best opportunity ever for new players to learn the game. Many of these players will naturally go on to also play in casinos, so this Guide should benefit brick & mortar clubs as well as online card rooms.
Online casino poker Card Rooms
Second, this site has online casino poker cardrooms as paid advertisers, making it in my interest to create more customers for them, which in turn attracts more ad dollars. Readers should understand that I do get a benefit from writing this Guide. I'm not paid by publishers or by readers but I get compensation indirectly via advertising. So, if you find this information helpful or thought provoking, I hope you will consider patronizing my advertisers. If they get customers, they'll pay me, and thus the online-focused pages on this website will continue to be revised and grow over time -- grow with the new technology, new cardrooms and influx of new players.
Online cardrooms differ in small ways, but are similar in big ways. Players should easily be able to recognize small differences between the sites when they encounter them, so almost all the concepts apply to any online cardroom.
The first thing to understand is that online casino poker is not the same as brick & mortar casino casino poker (hereafter I'll call this "casino casino poker"). They are different games. I’m not saying one is better than the other, or necessarily more or less profitable. They are just different in fundamental ways. Many of the abilities needed to win in casino casino poker of course also exist in online casino poker. You still need good starting cards... you still shouldn't tilt... you still shouldn't play at a level you can't afford, and so on. I'm not going to reinvent the wheel on that stuff. Check out the rest of this website, the casino poker magazines and books to study those things that are the same online as in a casino. A flush beats a straight online. We don't need to go over that.
Signing Up
Joining an online site is simple. You use an online payment service like Neteller (see below) or give them your credit card to buy chips just like you would buy a book at Amazon or a plane ticket at United Airlines. You don't even have to do that at first. You can play free games without giving any credit card information. You should play the free games for at least an hour or so to get the hang of how fast the action goes, what buttons to click, what happens when you click a button that you aren't sure what it does, all the bells and whistles of how the site works. The free games have little value in learning to play to win though. They are excellent for a total novice, offering newbies a way to practice calculating basic odds on the fly and discovering the relative strengths of hands, but you still should get off free games as soon as you can. Even playing the .5/.10 games will offer you far more useful learning opportunities than the free games.
Give thought to your login name. Some people want to be distinctive, memorable. Others want to be as anonymous as possible. Your screen name is the first bit of "table image" you present to the other players. Choose one that presents the personality you want to convey to your opponents.
Building an Online casino poker Bankroll
The first enormous difference you confront between playing online and in a casino is when you go to buy chips. Card rooms generally limit how much you can deposit each day. Winning ring game casino poker is all about putting in hours. If all games are about equal, and you always play the same winning way, the more you play, the more you make. So, putting yourself out of action by losing your bankroll is a critical mistake.
In casino casino poker, you can reach into your pocket and grab more cash (for good or ill). Not so online. The first thing you need to do is build an online bankroll. No matter what you are properly bankrolled to play in a casino, when you first join you have to be sure you don't play over the head of your online bankroll, or you might put yourself out of action temporarily, until you can get more cash online. Basically, you can't play correctly online until you have accumulated a correct bankroll.
A quicker way to build you bankroll at most online casino poker rooms is to transfer funds from an existing player.
The online cardrooms have their reasons for limiting buy-ins, from protecting players from blowing their brains out in one session to not wanting to deal with substantial contested credit card charges. While these are legitimate concerns on the cardrooms' part, the restricted buy-in is an artificial obstacle to winning that has to be overcome by new players. After establishing a record of play over a period of time, players can Email customer support for an increase in the different bankroll restrictions.
The current best deposit and withdrawal choice available for non-US players is through Neteller. Its website details convenient ways to get paid, including direct deposit into your checking account. Even though it might seem complicated at first, Neteller is an easy way to promptly and securely move money around online, and into your pocket.
Cashing Out and Your Internet Bankroll
Another artificial problem the online cardrooms create out of necessity involves cashing out. Suppose you have carefully charged up a $1500 bankroll, and you have won $800 in a week. Not bad. You want that $800 in your pocket and you want to make another similar amount the next week. Well, you can't do it. The cash out rules require you to first pay back your original deposit method, and then get sent your profit. So, to get your $800, you have to pay off that $1500 you sensibly charged up, leaving you with a zero bankroll. It's a bit complicated, but in essence, cardrooms require winning players to play on their profits, not on their credit cards.
So, if you don't have a friend to fund your account via a transfer, the process you need to do is: play carefully at a moderate limit until you have been able to charge up an adequate bankroll, play at your chosen limit, pay off your original deposit as you win amounts above that adequate bankroll figure,
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then finally cash out your profits that exceed your chosen bankroll.
I don’t mean this to be taken exactly literally, but it should be clear that much more so than in casino casino poker, you need to manage your bankroll online.
Leaving some liquid cash on Neteller or similar services is a good idea too so you can be sure to take advantage of any deposit bonuses a cardroom might be offering. You have to adapt and work around the cardroom restrictions. Being in action every day at the limit you want to play at is how you maximize profits, and online it takes some strategic planning to accomplish this.
The Lobby
Working the lobby is as important as working the game you play. In casino casino poker you can walk around the room, briefly look at all the games and limits being played, and study what type of game each one is. On the other hand, the online lobby offers a wealth of information just by clicking buttons: average pot size, number of players seeing the flop, how many hands played per hour, names of the players in each game, who is on the waiting list, and how many games of a particular limit are underway. (There is also another critical use of the lobby, but we will get to that below.)
Each bit of information is something we can use to choose the right game and limit. Some folks like wild games. Some prefer more passive ones. Some like full games; some prefer short-handed. Players who are nearly equally competent in all games can choose between dozens of games at the limit of their choice. Game and table selection is a critical part of casino casino poker. Fundamentally, it is even more important online. At first glance it might seem that table selection is less important online because it is extremely easy to move from one game to another. I think that really is just an argument for why table selection is more important online. The tools are available for players to be constantly aware of where the good games are. Constant vigilance is a price of winning online.
When signing up for games, never choose the "any game at this limit" option. This hamstrings your ability to independently manipulate your position on each sign-up list. For instance, if you've signed up for any $15/30 Holdem game, and your name comes to the top of the list in a game filled with players you don’t want to play with, if you pass this game, you are removed from all the $15/30 lists. Likewise, if you rise to the top of the list on a game that doesn't look good now, but has potential because of others behind you on the waiting list, you may want to unjoin that list and then rejoin again at the bottom -- perhaps when your name, now seventh, rises to the top, the game will be good. If you've signed up for "any game," that option is not available to you. You simply will be put at the bottom of every single list you are on!
At the busy online cardrooms, you have many options to choose from, and a lot of information to use in choosing. Don't restrict yourself. Keep several cardrooms on your computer to choose from. Look for the games that fit with your style. When your game texture changes from favorable to mediocre or worse, cruise the lobby for greener pastures. Keep constantly vigilant. Knowledge is power.
Playing Two (or More) Games
One enormous difference between casino casino poker and online is the ability to play two (or more) games simultaneously online. Many players choose this option. And that is very, very, very good for us. No matter how good a player is, it is inevitable that when playing two games, a player's ability will diminish a little or a lot. A player making $20 an hour playing one game is simply not going to make $40 an hour playing two games. It's a certainty that sometimes hands will overlap, small opportunities will be missed, decisions rushed. This player may do better overall by playing two games, say making $34 an hour combined from the two games, but as opponents, they will do less well in any particular game they play in. This means, instead of facing a player who has an expectation to take $20 an hour out of our game, we face one who will only take out maybe $17. And, a player who expects to lose $30 an hour will now lose $37 an hour (or whatever) in our game. There may be a few scatterbrained players who the confusion of playing in two games actually benefits but those people will be rare, and they will likely play so poorly that it hardly matters.
So we have some good players' expectation going down, and some bad players' expectation going down. Where does that expectation/money go? Some of it should go to us. The other lobby monitoring skill I mention above is: you should monitor the lobby to see which players in your game are playing two or more games and who isn't.
Just to be clear, I’m not saying you shouldn’t play two games (once you have experience playing online). If you are like the player above who could make $20 an hour playing one game or $34 an hour playing two, by all means play two. You should just recognize that there are many strategies available to be used against a player playing two games.
For instance, suppose you are head-up in a fairly passive Holdem game against a player who is also playing in a high-action second game. Suppose you both check the flop. Now the turn card comes, and you pause. You take some time. You know what just happened? Your opponent very possibly was just dealt a hand in the lively game. Maybe even a monster! Maybe he has two aces. He doesn't want to be dawdling over this stinky little pot here, so he may check the "check/fold in turn" box as he impatiently waits for you. You should see where this is going -- players who play two games inevitably are going to be easier to bluff. Why call with bottom pair at this table when you can be raising with two kings on the other table? Why waste time waiting for some dip taking time over a tiny pot when it's just been raised in your other game and you have AsKs?
Of course, your opponent might have 72o in the other game. But the point still remains, this opponent will simply be more bluffable because sometimes he will have good reason to focus his attention elsewhere.
And it's not just bluffing either. Against opponents playing two games, you should be much more willing to value bet mediocre hands. Suppose a Holdem board is Ts7h2d. You bet 66. Your opponent, holding KsQs, is dealt two jacks at his other table. It should be obvious that in general you are going to win a lot more pots uncontested from players who play two games.
Players playing two games will generally lay down their small blind more; be more likely to go on tilt (two games to get a bad beat!); be more likely to actually have a strong hand when they do play a major, drawn-out pot; be more likely to use the check/fold/raise "in turn" buttons; be more likely to play straightforwardly; and any number of other things. While alone none of these may be huge, they add up to John giving away a significant advantage to a player who knows John is playing two games.
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Just like in casino casino poker, online your income comes from the application and re-application of your advantages over the long haul. Each one of the small edges that the two-game players give up represents a real amount of money in our pocket. Pennies from here, quarters from there... adds up to a lot of dollars in the long run.
Most important, playing two games leads to players taking more emotional defeats in a short period of time. Two game players inevitably tilt more than one game players.
Finally, if you are a losing player, here is the number one lesson for you: play only one game at a time. You will lose less money.
Player Notes: The Good, the Bad, and the Idiots
When playing casino casino poker, we see our opponents. I seldom forget a truly good or a truly horrible player. Online, all we see are little icons, many with similar or extremely non-descript names. Plus, we play against thousands of players from literally all over the world, playing at all different hours of the day or night -- all at the same time! Player notes offer a way to remember notable players. For me "notable" means the best players -- and the worst goofballs. For the most part, the vast majority of players are interchangeable weak-tight lemmings. You don't really need to keep track of them. But strong players and terrible players come in much smaller numbers. Also, since I play mostly Omaha8, I keep track of super-tight players. These players aren’t "strong" players, and may not even win, but when one bets an 876 flop, I know to put my A3 in the muck. Depending on the game you play, you might also want to keep track of other player categories, but I definitely suggest you track the best and the worst. Most cardrooms now make this easy by including a "Notes" feature where just by clicking on a player's icon you are able to then make notes about that player that are permanently stored on your computer.
Hand Histories
By clicking the dealer tray, you can have your "hand histories" sent you, the records for the individual hands of the games you played in. Novice players can find these valuable learning tools, and even experienced players can use them to study the play of specific opponents. Commercial programs are even available that can analyze tens of thousands of hand histories in a flash and spit out a wide variety of statistics on you and your opponents.
All-Ins Poker
When legitimate, an all-in occurs (besides the obvious when a player has no more chips) when a player loses his or her connection to the game, either because of being bumped offline by a flaky Internet connection or because the cardroom is having server problems. Sometimes you'll lose pots due to legitimate disconnects, and other times you'll win, so you shouldn’t worry about them that way. But if you suspect someone illegitimately times out because they don’t want to call a bet (or two or three), contact Support. Such a person may get away with it once or twice, but eventually they will be stopped.
How To Deal With Support
Online Support is generally good -- prompt, knowledgeable, helpful. However, you must understand that they are not floor supervisors. They don't directly see problems; they don't have a chance to ask multiple players or dealers about problems; and, they have literally hundreds of hands swirling around them. Some problem that is plain as day to you, might not be clear to a Support person who didn’t see what happened. Before contacting Support about a hand or situation, be sure to request your hand history. You will almost certainly get a better resolution (and make more sense) if Support has the number of the hand history to refer to.
Don't be shy to bring matters to Support's attention. If you actually are "right" about some problem, very often they will correct it how they can, including returning a courtesy bet. But don't be an annoying pest. Support has records of everything. If you are constantly whining and trying to weasel a few bucks out of them for compensation for mistakes you made, you will wear out your welcome quickly.
Support is the closest equivalent to a floorman. If some player is being belligerent, if you think some collusion might be going on, if you think some player is playing consistently slow just to be annoying... tell Support. It is their job to make our online casino poker experience pleasant and fair. They can't do their job without our help.
Paranoia Strikes Deep
Online casino poker has one truly fundamental thing in common with casino casino poker: most players lose. But the way players lose online inevitably leads to some delusional paranoia. For instance, in casino casino poker, most players can effectively fool themselves about how they are doing. The money they buy-in or cash out mixes in their pockets. They win some days and lose others. It's easy to say: "I break even, or win a little." Online the bookkeeping is in black and white. Your losses are documented; your wins are sent to you in a very deliberate way. You know if you are winning or losing.
Rather than admit the legitimacy of their losses, some of those players who delude themselves about their casino poker ability in a casino end up charging the online cardrooms with some truly amazing practices. Most of these charges are hopelessly illogical paranoia. The fact of the matter is, the amount of money a semi-successful online cardroom can make is staggering. The idea that a hugely profitable multi-million dollar enterprise with relatively small overhead would jeopardize its goose that laid the golden egg for a few more dollars by punishing people for cashing out... ideas like this are just ludicrous. (At least one rogue online cardroom used bots and did not declare that fact, but this was easy to discover and they are out of business as of this writing.
Online players should install firewalls on their computers. (If you have DSL or cable, you should have one anyway.) Check out this page for links and information on Firewalls, Spyware & Internet Security. If you are the type of person who worries about the grassy knoll a lot, a firewall should ease some concerns.
But firewalls end up causing some paranoia too. Sometimes your computer briefly loses its connection to the cardroom, even if your Internet connection stays up. When this happens, the cardroom's software tries to reconnect to your computer, which alerts your firewall (unless you configure a rule to always allow a connection from that particular site.) This is not evidence of your computer being hacked by somebody who wants to see your cards! Configure your firewall sensibly and you can play without hacking worries.
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Good Online Poker
Good online poker poker poker players are usually looking for any kind of edge they can find, so it isn't surprising to see poker poker players studying tapes and/or DVDs of these tournaments. Viewers believe they can pick up tells on the participants, and even if they believe it unlikely that they are ever going to battle Howard Lederer at a final table (someone I would consider an unlikely candidate for revealing tells, by the way), they believe they can learn much more about how top pros play.
While I have no doubt that careful study of each of these learning opportunities can produce the desired effects, rarely have I seen a better example of the old homily, "A little knowledge can be a dangerous thing." poker poker players should study the televised tournaments, and those who fail to do so will find themselves at a competitive disadvantage. Nonetheless, those who don't study carefully may find themselves worse off than if they had never studied at all.
Today I'm going to teach you some areas where your study should be particularly careful, because if it isn't, that sound you won't hear is your chips hitting the floor when you don't drop them … because you will lose them all at the table.
Taking the most obvious and perhaps most easily overlooked problem first, if you are like most poker poker players, you have probably been struck by how much bluffing goes on at final tables. While John Duthie (winner of the inaugural online poker Million) got extra credit here for running some of the most spectacular naked bluffs anyone has seen since streaking was a college fad, we all still see a lot of bluffing and semibluffing at televised final tables.
The problem with watching all this bluffing and semibluffing and then deciding "that's how good poker poker players play" is that you're forgetting one mighty important factor. Can you guess it? Come on now, take a shot. If you don't know it, and if you can't guess it, you are already very much at risk.
It's really simple, and when you read it, you're probably going to try to save your online poker ego by saying or thinking something like, "Of course, I was already taking that into account," but the reality is that if you can't say it here, you haven't been taking it into account, and you know it.
The answer? You're watching a one- or two-hour TV show (44 or 88 minutes, once you allot room for the commercials), but it's a four- to eight-hour final table! You are missing the vast majority of the hands! Those bluffs that seem to come up every other hand aren't occurring every other hand. They're happening far less frequently — but they make for much better television, so they are shown far more frequently than the "better hand bets and takes it" hands.
As a result, before you start assuming that you must bluff far more frequently than you now bluff in order to win, start factoring in the TV element. It may well be that you do indeed need to bluff more frequently in order to win: just don't draw that conclusion simply because the knowledge came "as seen on TV."
The televised-bluff factor also comes into play in the second easily overlooked learning situation: tells. I know that I and, indeed, most of online poker's more serious poker poker players are busily studying televised tournaments to see whose jaw seems to work back and forth when he's bluffing, and who seems to keep a hand over his mouth when he has a good hand.
Perhaps even more important than pure tells, many poker poker players are studying betting patterns, in an effort to gain a line on how the better poker poker players play. This study will not only help you against those precise poker poker players, but will also teach you more about how great poker poker players play.
The problems here are twofold. First, you are learning how the great poker poker players play, not why. You may see that a poker player you respect limps in with certain hands and raises with others, but unless you get to ask him why he's doing it, you're playing monkey-see, monkey-do, and you will rarely find yourself in precisely the same online poker situation. At best, studying the great poker poker players for tendencies may lead you to the right questions, such as, "Why might Jennifer Harman raise with this hand?" or "Why might Phil Ivey flat-call with that hand?"
It may turn out that Jennifer is raising for reasons you haven't considered and therefore won't duplicate, and that Phil is calling for similar unknown reasons.
Learning why Jennifer and Phil play certain hands in certain ways may help you improve your overall game and, if you play in their rarified air, may help you against them. I think you are risking quite a bit if you assume that the way they play, or the tells they appear to be accidentally disclosing, may help you specifically against them. Why? Have you thought of it yet? To borrow some words you've seen before, can you guess it? Come on now, take a shot. If you don't know it, and if you can’t guess it, you are already very much at risk.
The reason is that Jennifer, Phil, and just about every other poker player who has sat down at a final table knowing their hands are being shown to the audience is already thinking a few levels ahead. I guarantee you that they are making moves and passing false tells along for the viewing audience, precisely because they aren't stupid and they know people will be studying them.
How can I be sure of this? Because the very first time I ever sat at a televised final table, I already had it all planned out … and if Andy Glazer has this figured out, I can guarantee you that Mike Matusow has this figured out.
No poker player is going to make a hugely bad play just because it will mislead a TV audience, but something that amounts to a change of pace is an entirely different matter. I just finished watching the Million Dollar Showdown at the Sands, and at one point during that event, I saw Phil Hellmuth limp in from the button with two queens. Do you think Hellmuth always limps in from the button with two queens? Of course not. Do you think it's an optimal play? If it were, he'd do it most of the time.
Instead, it's the kind of play he throws in once in a while, and I promise you that anyone who watched that tournament who thought he might ever play against Hellmuth remembered that play. It will make it that much harder to put Hellmuth on a hand the next time he limps in from late position. Does Hellmuth give up some equity by making that play? Probably a little … but the pot was small at that point, and if his chances of winning a small pot dropped, his chances of winning a big pot probably increased slightly.
On balance, Hellmuth was probably giving away a tiny amount of equity then and there — in return for a lot of equity later on in other events when he limps in from the button with smaller pairs.
If you remember that when you watch a televised online poker tournament, you're just watching highlights, not every hand, and also remember that online poker poker poker players are (when playing) sneaky, devious types who know full well that someone else is watching, you'll be well on your way to using those televised tournaments as the teaching tools they can be, instead of the traps they can be.
Of course, the poker poker players know that you know this, and you know that the poker poker players know that you know this, and the poker poker players know that you know that they know this, and … ain't online poker a grand game?
Number of years ago poker was simply a card game. By stating "just a
card game" I imply that it had some recognition among people who play
poker, but poker wasn't even close to being the trendy game it is
today. I bet in the past couple of months you’ve seen ads for online
poker. The ads are all over – on TV, on trustworthy web sites and on
the radio. What completed online poker so trendy? My guess is that
gambling a normal longing of a human being. And, with the discovery of
the internet – poker games became even more fashionable because a lot of
beginners can simply play free poker at any online casino.
Se also Casino Sites, Casinos & The top online casino guides and strategies
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