joseywales
Straight
I run a social/family home game. Ages from 22-70 and it's a lot of fun. We still have some newer players and keep stakes low. Typically a $25 buyin for $17 in chips and food. $.25/$.50, $.50 is the minimum bet and x 2 to raise. Players see too many flops, but that's the social aspect right. Some newer guys bust out early and reloads are $15. I want to encourage more sound play, but also keep guys from reloading as much (hassle).
Denominations - I typically have 6 or 7 players. I rake $.25 from every hand that sees a flop, which goes towards a High Hand payout at the end of the night. So, having a few more $.25 chips on the table to start isn't the worst thing. Still, I feel like by the end of the night, there are a lot of chips on the table. I peruse stacks and honestly most are playable and it's late in the game before anyone is overstacked with $.25.
Currently, for a $17 stack:
$.25 x 12
$.50 x 8
$1 x 10
$15 reloads I'll put two or those back to the table, then introduce $5 chips. Perhaps I should introduce $5 sooner, or at least reduce the $.25 and $.50 in reloads:
$.25 x 12
$.50 x 8
$1 x 8
What I'm considering:
- increasing the initial buyin to $30, which would now be $23 starting stack. This reduces the reloads and $5 bills in a change drawer, (I might try Venmo here as well). But does it encourage reckless play? Players have more chips and feel they can bluff, see more hands, etc. Prior to me hosting, this was the thought behind this buyin in structure, but I'm wondering if it's counterproductive. Having more chips to start also permits a player, who is down $11 already, the chance to recoup if he hits a good hand. Now he has $12 in chips work with, as opposed to $6. Is this just something that is game/player specific and I just have to exercise trial and error?
- What impact does reducing BB to $.25 have on this game? When the action returns to them, the SB and BB have a choice and my hope is that the bet will be at least $1 and we'll see more folds, and players saving $.25 for another hand.
Thanks for any insight.
Denominations - I typically have 6 or 7 players. I rake $.25 from every hand that sees a flop, which goes towards a High Hand payout at the end of the night. So, having a few more $.25 chips on the table to start isn't the worst thing. Still, I feel like by the end of the night, there are a lot of chips on the table. I peruse stacks and honestly most are playable and it's late in the game before anyone is overstacked with $.25.
Currently, for a $17 stack:
$.25 x 12
$.50 x 8
$1 x 10
$15 reloads I'll put two or those back to the table, then introduce $5 chips. Perhaps I should introduce $5 sooner, or at least reduce the $.25 and $.50 in reloads:
$.25 x 12
$.50 x 8
$1 x 8
What I'm considering:
- increasing the initial buyin to $30, which would now be $23 starting stack. This reduces the reloads and $5 bills in a change drawer, (I might try Venmo here as well). But does it encourage reckless play? Players have more chips and feel they can bluff, see more hands, etc. Prior to me hosting, this was the thought behind this buyin in structure, but I'm wondering if it's counterproductive. Having more chips to start also permits a player, who is down $11 already, the chance to recoup if he hits a good hand. Now he has $12 in chips work with, as opposed to $6. Is this just something that is game/player specific and I just have to exercise trial and error?
- What impact does reducing BB to $.25 have on this game? When the action returns to them, the SB and BB have a choice and my hope is that the bet will be at least $1 and we'll see more folds, and players saving $.25 for another hand.
Thanks for any insight.