At what point does a "home game" become a "league"? Where's the line? (1 Viewer)

phys

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Been thinking about this a lot lately, partly because it keeps coming up in other threads here. There seems to be a fuzzy moment where a recurring home game quietly becomes something else — a league, a club, a semi-serious operation — and people don't always agree on when that happened or whether it's a good thing.

Some markers I've noticed that seem to signal the shift: you start tracking who owes who; someone builds a points table; there's a waiting list; new people show up who weren't personally invited by the host; someone starts calling it "the league" without irony. But none of those are definitive on their own.

My take: the real line is when the host starts making decisions to serve the game rather than their friend group. If you've ever adjusted a rule or changed the format because "it's better for the game" rather than "it's what my buddies prefer," you've probably crossed it. At that point it's a league whether you call it one or not.

Curious where others draw it — and whether you think the transition is generally a good thing or if something gets lost when it formalizes. Anyone been through it?
 
Usually when the buy in amount for a game causes most of your friends that started playing with the group to drop out, but it attracts more “poker players”. Usually the host is the most serious person in the original group about poker. The passion within the rest of the friends usually will die off so the host needs to expand the game to keep it going.
 
I‘ve been talking/planning with some of my players to have both - fun games and league games with different structures. I don‘t think you have to turn everything into a serious league and leaving the regular games behind. At least that‘s how I think about it, with very little experience.

I am under pressure to increase buy in at my home game. It will definitely push people out that helped make my game fun and successful, so it ain’t gonna happen.
An option for this would be to have different games. I‘ve read a lot of people running a small game, .05/.10 f.e. on one table and a bigger game on another table. That way the original group that‘s maybe not so deep into poker can still hang and enjoy without stepping over their bankroll limits. And other players you might meet along the way that want to play for more can also come.
 
Been thinking about this a lot lately, partly because it keeps coming up in other threads here. There seems to be a fuzzy moment where a recurring home game quietly becomes something else — a league, a club, a semi-serious operation — and people don't always agree on when that happened or whether it's a good thing.

Some markers I've noticed that seem to signal the shift: you start tracking who owes who; someone builds a points table; there's a waiting list; new people show up who weren't personally invited by the host; someone starts calling it "the league" without irony. But none of those are definitive on their own.

My take: the real line is when the host starts making decisions to serve the game rather than their friend group. If you've ever adjusted a rule or changed the format because "it's better for the game" rather than "it's what my buddies prefer," you've probably crossed it. At that point it's a league whether you call it one or not.

Curious where others draw it — and whether you think the transition is generally a good thing or if something gets lost when it formalizes. Anyone been through it?

I feel this is similar to the games I host. It started out with like 8 friends at micro stakes and has grown a lot bigger with a lot of new players (friends of friends) and there is way more appetite than there are spots available. I've increased the blinds and some players from the OG group left but new ones keep coming in. I kinda like it tho as I'm always looking to player higher stakes
 
I am under pressure to increase buy in at my home game. It will definitely push people out that helped make my game fun and successful, so it ain’t gonna happen.
It would seem you will either lose the players wanting the change or lose the players you started with if you make the change. Either option has its disadvantages.
 
My take: the real line is when the host starts making decisions to serve the game rather than their friend group. If you've ever adjusted a rule or changed the format because "it's better for the game" rather than "it's what my buddies prefer," you've probably crossed it. At that point it's a league whether you call it one or not.
Agree with you 100%. I created a club from the start and I have lost players every year because I am always enhancing the game somehow to keep it fresh. That said, every year the new members that come in outweigh the ones that leave both in number and quality because they appreciate the structure and are more engaged. Overall, this is better for the club.

I don't believe that games have a choice but to evolve. If you do the same thing year over year players will want more and leave regardless.

You can't run a poker game/club and sell ice cream at the same time....
 
For our tourney league:
- Returning players year over year.
- Clear rules (TDA)
- Yearly schedule published for participants to plan ahead.
- Points awarded at each game. Healthy competition.
- Money set aside for final championship game & POY.
- POY awarded at the end of the year& championship for player meeting specific requirements.
 
Are we only talking about tournament play here?

In the cash game I have hosted for almost 20 years, I have definitely made changes over the years because they were "better for the game", but my game is still just a gathering of friends playing poker.
 
@TheYeti — that's a fair pushback, and worth separating out. A lot of the traits I was pointing to do apply more naturally to tournament/league setups — points tables, waiting lists, championships — so you're right that the framing maybe skewed that way.

That said, I do think the same underlying shift can happen in cash games too, just differently. Your example — making changes "better for the game" — is exactly it. When you're adjusting rules or format to optimize the poker rather than to accommodate the specific people in the room on any given night, something has changed in how you're thinking about it. It might still feel like a gathering of friends, and maybe it genuinely is, but the host's mental model has moved from "how do I make sure everyone has a good time?" to "how do I run a tight, fair game?" That's a meaningful transition even if no one calls it a league.

I guess my framing would be: a cash game doesn't have to become a league to "cross the line" — it can cross a different line, from pure social gathering into something a bit more intentional. Neither is better or worse, just different things.

Curious whether your game ever hit a moment like that, or if it's stayed genuinely just friends the whole time.
 
@TheYeti — that's a fair pushback, and worth separating out. A lot of the traits I was pointing to do apply more naturally to tournament/league setups — points tables, waiting lists, championships — so you're right that the framing maybe skewed that way.

That said, I do think the same underlying shift can happen in cash games too, just differently. Your example — making changes "better for the game" — is exactly it. When you're adjusting rules or format to optimize the poker rather than to accommodate the specific people in the room on any given night, something has changed in how you're thinking about it. It might still feel like a gathering of friends, and maybe it genuinely is, but the host's mental model has moved from "how do I make sure everyone has a good time?" to "how do I run a tight, fair game?" That's a meaningful transition even if no one calls it a league.

I guess my framing would be: a cash game doesn't have to become a league to "cross the line" — it can cross a different line, from pure social gathering into something a bit more intentional. Neither is better or worse, just different things.

Curious whether your game ever hit a moment like that, or if it's stayed genuinely just friends the whole time.

Pretty much since inception, my top priority has been running a tight, fair, "casino-like" game. I've had many of my players call me a rule nazi over the years, and that's just fine with me. :)
 

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