Poker Set Denominations (7 Viewers)

bburger

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Hi yall,

Was planning on buying a poker set of 500 chips to play very low stakes with some friends.

These were my ideas:
  1. 5$ buy-in. The most we've gone for in a night is 80$ in total value. Around a quarter of the people buy in an extra 5$ during the night on average. Barely any people go for a third buy-in on average. We tried out 10$ and didn't like it.
    Numbered chips where each 1 represents 1c of value. So a 100 chip is 100c, or 1$
  2. 5-10 players, with an average of 6-7
  3. Cash tournament (so no winner takes all; we take note of standings at some point and stop for the night)
    No increasing blinds (this is important, we tend to just add poker onto other activities - like watching the world cup after a few hours of poker)

My questions are:
What should my small blind/big blind be?
What denominations should I get in the set? I can choose any composition of 500 chips. Want to have a little bit of wiggle room, if that makes any sense.

Any other tips and thoughts are also welcome. Thanks :cool
 
Cash tournament with no rising blind levels: you’re just playing cash.

Blinds: .05/.05

Chips:
100x 5
300x 25
80x 100
20x 500
Total: 26,000 ($260)
Thanks! Sorry im not very well known with the terminology

5c/5c blinds
200 x 5c
200 x 25c
80 x $1
20 x $5

500 chips kind of seems like overkill, could probably do 400 chips:
120 100* x 5c
180 200* x 25c
80 x $1
20 x $5
Thank you!
 
Like Stephen's 500 more than mine assuming starting stacks 5 / 11 / 2, though if you would be doing starting stack of 10 / 10 / 2 could split the difference between 100-200 5c chips
 
Like Stephen's 500 more than mine assuming starting stacks 5 / 11 / 2, though if you would be doing starting stack of 10 / 10 / 2 could split the difference between 100-200 5c chips
You need far more than 5 nickels since you can't guarantee to break them. 10 is the absolute minimum, followed by 18 quarters (since you want a lot of workhorse chips). Keep paying buy-ins in quarters until you run out, then go to dollars and fives.
 
You need far more than 5 nickels since you can't guarantee to break them. 10 is the absolute minimum, followed by 18 quarters (since you want a lot of workhorse chips). Keep paying buy-ins in quarters until you run out, then go to dollars and fives.
mannn im not buying all these chips to put 2 denoms on the table :ROFL: :ROFLMAO:
 
Hi yall,

Was planning on buying a poker set of 500 chips to play very low stakes with some friends.

These were my ideas:
  1. 5$ buy-in. The most we've gone for in a night is 80$ in total value. Around a quarter of the people buy in an extra 5$ during the night on average. Barely any people go for a third buy-in on average. We tried out 10$ and didn't like it.
    Numbered chips where each 1 represents 1c of value. So a 100 chip is 100c, or 1$
  2. 5-10 players, with an average of 6-7
  3. Cash tournament (so no winner takes all; we take note of standings at some point and stop for the night)
    No increasing blinds (this is important, we tend to just add poker onto other activities - like watching the world cup after a few hours of poker)

My questions are:
What should my small blind/big blind be?
What denominations should I get in the set? I can choose any composition of 500 chips. Want to have a little bit of wiggle room, if that makes any sense.

Any other tips and thoughts are also welcome. Thanks :cool
OP game is playing more like T5 tournament rather than Cash Game

If you don't forseen any changes, then all you really need is
5 x 100
25 x 100
100 x 70
500 x 30

If your game processes to a REAL cash game, you will need to prepare up to 30 buyins (100 or 200bb / buyin) total (for average of 3 x 10 person)

You will need more workhorse chips as well as compared to Tourney set
5 x 100
25 x 200
100 x 140-200
500 x 40-60
 

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