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2012年12月19日 星期三

Rake Explained and Comparing Online Poker to Live Poker


The 'rake' can be defined as the fee the poker room charges players (from here on out 'poker room' or 'house' is referring to a casino, online poker room, local card club/poker room, or a game run by an individual(s)). There are generally two different methods that are used by the house to collect the rake. The first is when the card room will take a percentage of the pot up to a certain amount. For example, they could take 5% up to $3 before they 'push' the winner their chips. How much the house takes and what requirements must be met before they 'rake' the pot will differ between online poker rooms and 'live' (not online).

The second method, and the one that will not be discussed in too much depth here, is what is known as a 'time charge'. The house will collect a certain amount of money every half hour or hour from all the players playing. The time charge method is usually not used for the lower limit games, and even in the mid to high limit games, it is not always employed. From here on out 'the rake' is only going to refer to the rake that is collected from individual pots. This is the standard method that most poker players are used to and will be the focus of the rest of the article.

Live poker rooms can have different requirements of when they rake the pot and at what percentage. For live poker rooms the percentage is usually 10% and, depending on the poker room, can have a maximum of $3-$5. Some poker rooms also have a minimum rake that they take from each pot, regardless of the size. For example, if there is a 1/2 NL game and the blinds are $1 and $2, they might take up to $3 from the pot on the flop. This means that if everybody folds to the small blind, he/she calls the big blind, and the big blind checks, the house will collect up to $3 (depending on their policies), even though they are heads up and the pot only has $4. The house will then take another dollar once the pot reaches $40 (10% of $40 is $4, but they have already taken $3) and, if there maximum is $5, they will then take another dollar at $50.

Because most players realize that contributing $2 in order to win $1 is a tough proposition, most poker rooms will allow the small blind and big blind to 'chop'. This means that they can both receive their blinds back if they both agree that it is acceptable. This has to be done before the flop and no other players can be in the hand. Poker rooms that do collect rake no matter how many players there are if there is a flop, usually have a 'no flop, no drop' policy. This means that if there is no flop, no matter how many raises or how big the pot, the house will not collect any money from the flop. It needs to be remembered that not all live poker rooms collect rake if there is a flop. This is sometimes regional, but can also vary from poker room to poker room in the same region.

Online poker rake differs in several ways. The first is that the percent of rake that is usually taken is 5% and this is almost always capped at $3. Not only is there usually a maximum $3 collection, but there is almost always no minimums. In some games the pot will need to be as large as $30 before the house collects their percentage. In games where the house collects 5%, because of simplicity, they can divide the amount they collect into 'cents'. This means on a $20 pot there can be a rake of $0.50. For online games, there is not an option to chop if the small blind and big blind are in the hand before the flop.

The above descriptions of how live poker rooms and online poker rooms calculate and collect rake are the most common methods employed. As was mentioned, the rules will vary, but a majority of poker rooms use the above rules and using them as guidelines can help the poker player (whether a novice or beginner) decide which version offers the highest return. There are many other factors that determine the profitability of a poker game and it would be foolish to base game selection solely on the rake collected.

It is fairly obvious that the maximum rake that the house collects in live games is a significant amount higher than online. Even if it was assumed that they only charged a maximum of $3 the minimums are much higher than online poker rooms. Seeing a flop with three people and $9 in the pot ($6 after the rake is taken), for example, creates a negative expected value that is fairly tough to overcome. It is also safe to deduce that one pays more per hand in rake in a live setting as opposed to online.

Even though more is raked per hand in a live poker game, the amount that is paid per hour is comparable. In a live game, if the average rake per hand is $3, but there is only 30 hands an hour, the house will collect $90/hr. When playing online there is an average of 70 hands an hour. If the average rake collected per hand is $1.50, the hourly collection from the table is $105.

Using the above as guidelines (based off of 2/4 limit games) the table as a whole will pay more per hand in live games, but more per hour in online games. This is due to the amount of hands that are possible per hour per table online as opposed to live.




Shannon Gilchrist is the lead editor of Rake Tracker, a site dedicated to online poker rake tracking and rakeback.




2012年11月20日 星期二

Comparing Online Poker Sites


Online poker is still alive and well. While many sites have stopped taking on U.S. poker players there are still plenty of online poker opportunity on the World Wide Web. In this article we compare two sites on different aspects of online play. Poker Stars and Full Tit Poker.

Poker Stars

Poker Stars is the largest online site, with over 100,000 players at any particular time. As I write this article there are currently 131,000 playing either tournaments or cash games. If your just getting started with online poker, Poker Stars has free rolls almost every hour. The games rotate between Texas Hold 'Em, Omaha, Razz, Stud, Bedugi, and HORSE. They all can accommodate up 12,000 people. These are first round satellites. The top 64, 72, 88, or 99 finishers (depending on the game) move on to round two tournaments held on the weekends and have a $2,000 prize pool.

Poker Stars has a wide array of scheduled tournaments starting at just ten cents all the way up to $200 buy-in. The top 10% normally make the money. Occasionally the site offers a 20% payout tournament that pays double the amount of players. The big regularly scheduled tournament on the site is called "Sunday Millions." The site offers a number of small buy in satellites to this tournament, which has a buy-in of $215 and once a month, a $500 buy-in. Sunday Millions has a guaranteed prize pool of $1.5 Million. The winner walks away with approximately $170,000.

The sit and go schedule on Poker Stars is especially impressive, with limits ranging from $1.00 all the way up to $5,000. The sit and go fields range from heads up (one on one) to 180 players.

Cash games at Poker Stars are also quite extensive, starting at.01-.02 blinds to an amazing $1,000/$2,000 game. Cash games are offered in just about poker game you want to play

including HORSE and Deuce to Seven Lowball.

Full Tilt Poker

Full Tilt is where I spend most of my online poker playing. Full Tilt has about 60,000 players at any particular time. The biggest attraction at Full Tilt is the approachability of the Full Tilt Pros. Full Tilt offers poker forums and live chats with various poker pros where you can ask pros strategy questions in real time. You will see pros like Allen Cunningham, Mike Matusow, David Pham, or Erick Lindgren playing tournaments and cash games. The very unique feature of Full Tilt Poker is a bounty on any pro in any tournament of 30 players or more. If you knock a pro out of any tournament you receive a bounty of the tournament buy-in up to $200.

You can literally find any poker game you want at Full Tilt in tournaments or cash game. Imagine playing a Razz cash game. You can find it at Full Tilt.

Full Tilt's free roll schedule are about one every two hours. The field size is dramatically lower than Poker Stars with a limit of 2700 people, but only 27 players make the money. These free rolls are not satellites, they are real money tournaments with a $100 prize pool. The games rotate between No Limit Texas Hold 'Em, Omaha, Razz and HORSE.

The Tournament schedule at Full Tilt is quite vast. You can find a $3.00, 90 player, bounty sit and go tournament. The range of buy-ins range from $2.00 up to $1,000. The payouts are always the top 10% of the field. Full Tilt offers a number of "daily double" tournaments. They are two consecutively running tournaments with identical buy-ins. (the buy-ins are $5.00, $10.00, and $60.00 at various times of the day) If you cash in both tournaments you win extra money from extra jackpot prize pool. If you are able to win both tournaments you win the entire jackpot.

Full Tilt has a Sunday feature tournament, "The $750,000 guarantee." Anywhere from 20 to 50 poker professionals will play in the tourney each Sunday. Satellites from as little as 50 FTP Player Points can get you into this feature tournament.

Full Tilt has an extensive list of sit and go tournaments ranging in buy-in from $1.00 to an astonishing $5,000. The fields range from heads up (one on one) to 90 players. Sit and go games include Hold 'Em, Omaha, Razz, Stud, HOSE and HORSE. One unique sit and go that is exclusive to Full Tilt are their "Matrix"sit and go tournaments. In these tournaments you play four, one table sit and go tournaments at the same time against the same eight opponents. The tournament pays out based on survival and knock out points.




The best poker bonus can be found at PokerIncomeGuide.com. If you are looking for a great poker community, check out TheRoundersRoom.com, a poker forum for rounders.