This is not at all what I am saying. I am preparing players for the reality that the best hand will not hold up nearly as often as they like. But despite that, the best hand will hold up often enough and generate pots more than big enough to make up for the outdraws. For a simple crude example. If you get AA cracked 70% of the time in pots where you only put in 20% of the money, you are still going to make a mint.Exactly, you're going to need your hand to hold up much more often to win in Limit.
This however, is absolutely true. And I will add it is important to go for max value whenever you hit a speculative hand in limit. The aggression that wins in limit hold'em is hoping your opponents call too much when you have the goods, not hoping they fold when you don't have it as in the "bully poker" I was describing earlier.You can see more flops with suited and non suited connectors and one gaps. Position is also very important and you should be folding a lot more in early position and expect your high pocket pairs to have less showdown value
I figured since I’m not good at nolimit, I could be just as bad at limit, but limited to how badly I can be badAnd this should go without saying, but you’d want to actually be good at limit Holdem. It’s a different game than no limit.
I guess I’m getting old because it’s still odd to see a post like this. Limit holdem was the ONLY cash holdem in any casino for decades. Cash NLHE is the new kid on the block!![]()
Hard to find any home games around other that NLHE and PLO.The rake at a low limit game can really eat into you profits so play in a home game if you can.
My first few casino live games were Limit. As long as you’ve done your homework (read the books recommended in this thread), it is a little more comfortable than losing in no limit. I was playing exclusively 100NL and 200NL online during the boom but had a good foundation and library that included the limit game literature. Live NLH was intimidating af so I sat down at a 3/6 limit table. Played that for a few hours and loved it. Felt more like a home game than I had expected.I figured since I’m not good at nolimit, I could be just as bad at limit, but limited to how badly I can be bad
We have 8/16 limit here with only a 5% drop. That's actually somewhat beatable. And we have higher limits than that where the rake becomes negligible.When I started playing limit HE in a casino around 2005, the lowest stakes were $5/10. At the time, I knew almost nothing about rakes and drops in limit HE -- my decades of poker were all at home games. My "AHA!!!" moment was at a table with the same 9 players. Nobody left the table. It was a great group -- lots of laughter and camaraderie. About two hours into the session, I looked at everyone's stacks and saw that nobody had much more than the initial buy-in and most were below despite rebuys. Where did all the chips go? Yup, in the boxes for rake, promo drops, and dealer tips. Lesson learned.
Interesting factoid: the promo drop was used to fund large guarantees for their tournaments. I played in casinos only when I was desperate for a game.
Yeah, around me the rake is atrocious. Public cardrooms are raking/dropping a max of $7 or $8 per hand (and of course a huge chunk of it comes out by $20 every hand). Makes any form of low-limit poker unsustainable.When I started playing limit HE in a casino around 2005, the lowest stakes were $5/10. At the time, I knew almost nothing about rakes and drops in limit HE -- my decades of poker were all at home games. My "AHA!!!" moment was at a table with the same 9 players. Nobody left the table. It was a great group -- lots of laughter and camaraderie. About two hours into the session, I looked at everyone's stacks and saw that nobody had much more than the initial buy-in and most were below despite rebuys. Where did all the chips go? Yup, in the boxes for rake, promo drops, and dealer tips. Lesson learned.
Interesting factoid: the promo drop was used to fund large guarantees for their tournaments. I played in casinos only when I was desperate for a game.
I don't really need or want casino-level hospitality to play the game I enjoy. Not that I dislike those various comforts, but for me they're a very thin slice of what matters.I did some napkin math on this when my local club went to 5+1 instead of 4+1 about 12 years ago and arrived at the figure they must be expecting about $120/hour per table. Which actually makes some sense.
From a hospitality perspective, even back then your fast casual restaurants would expect to get $20-25 out of a table for two, $120 from a table of 9 seems reasonable for everything a poker room has to provides.with inflation and everything, I could see that expectation is now $150/table/hour.
I'm not trying to say more rake is better, obviously as cardroom patrons it's in our interest to be provided with what we expect for as little rake as possible. But I think it's okay to compare what they provide with other hospitality and understand why it's what it is.
Oh I do agree with your characterization here. I think limit games 4/8 and under are completely unbeatable if the table is raking $150/hr.The price we're paying is the financial viability of lower-stakes games—turning them into sucker games where everyone's paying the house to play for no realistic chance at significant gain. It gradually drains the lower tiers of the poker economy of funds that would otherwise circulate and stoke interest in the game, and it discourages people from playing by making the game demoralizing.