1A25R
Flush
Day 1 is a big 8h level 1
your thoughts?
your thoughts?
I interpret their statement of the rule as 'ante first - blind second', as opposed to blind first - ante second, for a big blind position player with less than the sum of the big blind plus ante amounts.BBA rule is stupid. No big surprise, given the absurdity of the rest of the format.
Where do you get 40bb from? 20k with the starting level of 100/200/200 is 100bb deep. Do you mean after getting blinded down?I guess that if you don't play on Day 1, you are blinded out in 40 orbits, which can take 6 hours ?
Another point it's that with a single 8h level the dynamics are more like cash game and 20K stack represents 40BB...
I'll never play cash with 40BB
I'll would like to test, just give a try knowing that it will be bad and hoping that i'm wrong![]()
It's been well established that you don't like antes in tournaments in general.Both, but particularly the latter.
And both artificially-manufactured inequities/disadvantages are totally and easily avoidable.Both have the issue of putting the BB player at a "disadvantage" in an even stacked all in situation as the BB will not be able to stack a person that began the hand with an even stack, but with traditional antes they would be able to do so.
Because many believe the advantages outweigh the downsides as with nearly every choice in life.And both artificially-manufactured inequities/disadvantages are totally and easily avoidable.
Either use individually-posted antes, or no antes at all. Neither option causes inequities whatsoever.
It is ridiculous to introduce an unnecessary game structure that contains built-in flaws.
Where do you get 40bb from? 20k with the starting level of 100/200/200 is 100bb deep.
It's no different than a person in the BB having only a single ante left with traditional antes. He wins only the antes. It just changes how this is going to occurs. It's more unfair to the rest of the people that a player should get to "rob" people of their ante by posting the BB first.Any system that creates the possibility of a player forced to be all-in (and risk elimination) with zero chance of winning any chips (except his own) is seriously -- and inherently -- flawed.
That's M not bb.100sb + 200BB + 200 ante = 500
20,000 / 500 = 40
Eliminating antes has the huge con of not putting enough pressure on short stacks and causing tournaments to take longer. No ante creates tighter play, which IMO is not good for the game.Three points.
First, the blind structure is stupid. Level one takes ten hours (even though they call it two levels of eight and two hours) then the next ten hours has 26 levels? I’d much rather see the levels split evenly over the 20 hours.
Second, they want to be the deepest tournament in history but introduce antes in the first level - stupid and contradictory. Starting with 40 orbits in chips is not a deep stack.
Third, the very fact that the BBA (or any form of ante in which one player posts for all players) requires a “trade-off” or “compromise” shows it has an inherent flaw. I totally agree that the dealer not having to ask for antes from a couple players is an advantage (for the dealer) and it might speed up play to a small extent. However, it comes at the expense of other game aspects that have already been mentioned. It doesn’t matter if the pros outweigh the cons when simply eliminating antes (and having an appropriate structure) has the same pros and fewer cons (if any).

Increasing the blinds puts plenty of pressure on the short stacks. In the end, you pay M every orbit. Adjusting the blind structure accordingly does the same thing.Eliminating antes has the huge con of not putting enough pressure on short stacks and causing tournaments to take longer. No ante creates tighter play, which IMO is not good for the game.
Also, what constitutes a deep stack is subjective. An avg M of 40 (and increasing) that is set to last 10 hours is VERY deep for a tournament. It always boggles my mind how people only seen to care about being "deep" in a tournament in the beginning but not the middle and later stages. This structure (which is bad) seeks to emulate the early middle stages of a tournament and freeze it there for a long time by eliminating the super deep beginning.Three points.
First, the blind structure is stupid. Level one takes ten hours (even though they call it two levels of eight and two hours) then the next ten hours has 26 levels? I’d much rather see the levels split evenly over the 20 hours.
Second, they want to be the deepest tournament in history but introduce antes in the first level - stupid and contradictory. Starting with 40 orbits in chips is not a deep stack.
Third, the very fact that the BBA (or any form of ante in which one player posts for all players) requires a “trade-off” or “compromise” shows it has an inherent flaw. I totally agree that the dealer not having to ask for antes from a couple players is an advantage (for the dealer) and it might speed up play to a small extent. However, it comes at the expense of other game aspects that have already been mentioned. It doesn’t matter if the pros outweigh the cons when simply eliminating antes (and having an appropriate structure) has the same pros and fewer cons (if any).
Yes, but then you have to make the level jumps bigger (which people generally don't want) and it doesn't solve the action problem. No ante means less action as pot odds are worse with no ante. Promoting tight play is not fun.Increasing the blinds puts plenty of pressure on the short stacks. In the end, you pay M every orbit. Adjusting the blind structure accordingly does the same thing.
Spoiler: he hates everything.I won't make any comments until I hear what Allen 'The Chainsaw' Kessler thinks.....![]()
I would 100% disagree. Long levels (like in the WSOP) promote tight play. Promoting loose/aggressive play is not fun for me. I prefer picking spots, but with the spectre of the clock. This can be with an ante, just blinds, or ante only. However blinds only is the fastest for getting people to post. BB Ante is equally fast as blinds only, but with cracks in the logistics.Promoting tight play is not fun.
I agree with your list, we just disagree about the meaningfulness of antes. It's obvious that you can alter structures to end at approximately the same time with or without antes. But antes are far from meaningless in terms of their affect on the game.I would 100% disagree. Long levels (like in the WSOP) promote tight play. Promoting loose/aggressive play is not fun for me. I prefer picking spots, but with the spectre of the clock. This can be with an ante, just blinds, or ante only. However blinds only is the fastest for getting people to post. BB Ante is equally fast as blinds only, but with cracks in the logistics.
If level jumps are consistent, the difference between slightly bigger jumps or an ante is psychological.
If you prefer antes, have at them. M is M. Some prefer the "bomb pot" an ante brings. That's why progressive slots are popular. I think in the terms of the big picture, so I dont care. All I need to know:
If the blind structure is fairly consistent, antes are meaningless.
- Rake (less is better)
- Pay table (Not too flat, not too steep)
- Estimated time to completion
All you needed to say.This benefits aggressive players
But that wasn't even the main point of my post. It in theory benefits anyone that cares about having larger stack to pot ratios post flop. For a given M, and assuming standard opening raise sizes, the ante structure allows more playability.All you needed to say.
You prefer a game that plays to your style. I dont have a preference. Either way all the chips get into the middle by the end of the night, via slower increases with antes or steeper increases without.