thoomp
Sitting Out
Hey PCF peeps,
Seth here from Boston, and it’s nice to meet you all. Although I’m a long-time lurker, I’m recently a registered member. You guys are great.
For nearly 15 years now, I’ve hosted a casual monthly poker night with a small group of 5-6 friends. We usually meet up on a weeknight for dinner, followed by 3 hours of NL tourneys (4 x 45 minutes, no rebuys, blinds double when someone is knocked out). Although our stakes have always been laughably low, it has ultimately always been about catching up, bragging rights, and just having fun. Although we’re not hyper-competitive, we take the actual poker play very seriously and all look forward to it. When someone is knocked out, their penalty is not much about money loss – but is instead about waiting the remainder of the 45 minutes until the next tourney (which usually involves a lot of shuffling).
For years, I’ve used a fantastic set of 300 Paulson Classics that my incredible wife got me, many years before they were discontinued. (Yes, I’m seriously kicking myself for not buying more when they were readily and affordably available!) Until now, it has been weighted towards limit/cash games, and I’ve always wanted higher denominations. For about a decade, we’ve gotten by where the chip values never matched the printed values. That has always been a PITA, and has always slowed down the game.
Finally, I bit the bullet and way overpaid on eBay last night for more chips (stupid eBay for changing their user interface – I accidentally bid incorrectly – Argh!). Anyhow, this greatly augmented the set overall and I should have the extra chips by the end of the week.
Here’s what I’ll have:
COLOR $ COUNT
__________________________________
WHITE 1 174
RED 5 125
BLUE 10 25
GREEN 25 74
BLACK 100 98
PURPLE 500 50
ORANGE 1000 50
__________________________________
TOTAL CHIPS: 596
I’ve read the threads extensively. Given that the lightning tourneys work really well for us, what are some good starting chip stacks? 12/12/7/5 (25 x 100 x 500 x 1000)?
From what I’ve read, ideally you want a 4:3:2:1 ratio, but that would mean a ton of 25s and apparently they’re really hard to come by. In the very least bit, it would be nice to pick up 26 green $25s and 2 black $100 to round up the set to even numbers.
For years, we’ve done chip counts of 10 /10/5, which broke down to $25/$50/$100…with blinds doubling when someone was knocked out. It kept things simple, but it’s time to move on to ratios that are similar to standard NL tourneys at casinos and so forth (and not 1:4). Ideally, I’d like to have each person have more chips and variations than what we’ve had up until now.
Plus, to offset the purchase, I’m thinking of selling off some of the rarely used lower denomination chips (whites, I guess) to offset the purchase if I’ll never use them. Meanwhile, I’d like to future-proof the set to be as flexible as possible (maybe I’ll have times with many more people, cash games, limit games) and so forth.
Anyhow, feel free to fire out all sorts of suggestions per T1000, T10K, and other variants! After reading and re-reading both here on PCF and elsewhere, my head is spinning – so I’m all ears to hear what you experts say. I know this sort of question has been asked many different times before…but there have been different objectives and stack sizes – and I only have a certain number of chips to work with here.
(And I’m assuming @BGinGA – You’re the master at figuring this stuff out?)
So many thanks, everyone!
- Seth
Seth here from Boston, and it’s nice to meet you all. Although I’m a long-time lurker, I’m recently a registered member. You guys are great.
For nearly 15 years now, I’ve hosted a casual monthly poker night with a small group of 5-6 friends. We usually meet up on a weeknight for dinner, followed by 3 hours of NL tourneys (4 x 45 minutes, no rebuys, blinds double when someone is knocked out). Although our stakes have always been laughably low, it has ultimately always been about catching up, bragging rights, and just having fun. Although we’re not hyper-competitive, we take the actual poker play very seriously and all look forward to it. When someone is knocked out, their penalty is not much about money loss – but is instead about waiting the remainder of the 45 minutes until the next tourney (which usually involves a lot of shuffling).
For years, I’ve used a fantastic set of 300 Paulson Classics that my incredible wife got me, many years before they were discontinued. (Yes, I’m seriously kicking myself for not buying more when they were readily and affordably available!) Until now, it has been weighted towards limit/cash games, and I’ve always wanted higher denominations. For about a decade, we’ve gotten by where the chip values never matched the printed values. That has always been a PITA, and has always slowed down the game.
Finally, I bit the bullet and way overpaid on eBay last night for more chips (stupid eBay for changing their user interface – I accidentally bid incorrectly – Argh!). Anyhow, this greatly augmented the set overall and I should have the extra chips by the end of the week.
Here’s what I’ll have:
COLOR $ COUNT
__________________________________
WHITE 1 174
RED 5 125
BLUE 10 25
GREEN 25 74
BLACK 100 98
PURPLE 500 50
ORANGE 1000 50
__________________________________
TOTAL CHIPS: 596
I’ve read the threads extensively. Given that the lightning tourneys work really well for us, what are some good starting chip stacks? 12/12/7/5 (25 x 100 x 500 x 1000)?
From what I’ve read, ideally you want a 4:3:2:1 ratio, but that would mean a ton of 25s and apparently they’re really hard to come by. In the very least bit, it would be nice to pick up 26 green $25s and 2 black $100 to round up the set to even numbers.
For years, we’ve done chip counts of 10 /10/5, which broke down to $25/$50/$100…with blinds doubling when someone was knocked out. It kept things simple, but it’s time to move on to ratios that are similar to standard NL tourneys at casinos and so forth (and not 1:4). Ideally, I’d like to have each person have more chips and variations than what we’ve had up until now.
Plus, to offset the purchase, I’m thinking of selling off some of the rarely used lower denomination chips (whites, I guess) to offset the purchase if I’ll never use them. Meanwhile, I’d like to future-proof the set to be as flexible as possible (maybe I’ll have times with many more people, cash games, limit games) and so forth.
Anyhow, feel free to fire out all sorts of suggestions per T1000, T10K, and other variants! After reading and re-reading both here on PCF and elsewhere, my head is spinning – so I’m all ears to hear what you experts say. I know this sort of question has been asked many different times before…but there have been different objectives and stack sizes – and I only have a certain number of chips to work with here.
(And I’m assuming @BGinGA – You’re the master at figuring this stuff out?)
So many thanks, everyone!
- Seth