February 4, 2011

Room Blog: Which Poker Rooms Are Best?

Almost regardless of your level of experience as a poker player, one effective and fun way of improving your game is by reading poker room blogs. Here, professional and amateur players alike are able to share their tips and tricks in an informative and often interesting way. The quality of a poker room blog varies from site to site and we particularly recommend the one on First Poker Tips, at www.firstpokertips.co.uk/blog. The room blog here has articles on a range of subjects, including:

Tips for beginners

This room blog is an eye-opening look at the complexities of a game which is much simpler on its surface! No beginner player should enter the lions’ den without first understanding and practicing some of these simple tips and hints about the game.

Tips on bluffing

This room blog contains helpful advice on how to introduce the famous art of bluffing into your game. Virtually every poker player will need to exercise this skill from time to time and some more so than others! However, it can be difficult for beginners to introduce it into their game and even accomplished players will benefit from learning about the techniques employed by other players. This blog looks at how to reduce your risk when bluffing and how to avoid getting caught out!

Rankings of poker hands

This room blog introduces players to the fundamental concept of the order in which poker hands are ranked. A beginner player will not get far without a comprehensive understanding of this subject. Familiarity with this topic is necessary not only to understand the strength of your own hand, but also to understand the possible hands represented by your opponents.

Using poker calculators

If used properly, poker calculators can introduce mathematical principles to the art of poker. First Poker Tips contains a room blog which explains how to download the requisite tool and then use it effectively to understand concepts such as pot odds and out odds. With a bit of practice and application, this tool will help the poker player to make informed and scientific betting decisions.

The World Series of Poker

The World Series of Poker has been instrumental in bringing the game of poker into the popular mainstream. Excellent television coverage and commentary has transformed the game into a fascinating spectator sport which make it one of the easiest ways to pick up the game without even thinking about it. There is even a blog to explain how you can enter this event!

April 11, 2010

Poker Beats: What Is A Bad Beat And How Can You Deal With A Poker Beat?

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Poker Beats

Bad poker beats occur when one player beats another one in unlikely circumstances. Although there is no strict definition of the term, the winning player often takes the pot by hitting an unlikely card on the turn or river. Sometimes the winning player is rewarded despite making mathematically unsound decisions in calling another player’s hand or, alternatively, a really strong hand is beaten by an even stronger one.

Risks associated with poker beats

Suffering a bad beat can be extremely hard to accept. Some players, including poker professionals, will be sufficiently unsettled to enter a state of extreme frustration during which they risk allowing their emotions to rule their head. Typically, this could mean that their usual prime game strategy is neglected and they adopt a more aggressive style of play, remaining in hands which they would normally fold and trying to bluff their opponents.  When learning to play poker, its important to understand the best time to bluff.

Poker Beats girl on a beach

How can I cheer myself up?

 

How to deal with bad poker beats

The best thing a player can do when they suffer from bad poker beats is to forget about them. Poker players should understand that chance is one element of the game and accept that they offer themselves to the luck of the gods with every hand they play. However, over a sustained period of time, the element of skill will prevail over the element of chance.

Of course, this is much easier said than done and, as mentioned above, even professional players are not immune from the unsettling psychological processes which can be triggered by a bad beat. The old saying about not throwing good money after bad has great relevance here – when you have been a victim of a bad beat, it is more important than ever that you make your remaining chips harder for your opponents to win.

Finally, one way to make bad poker beats work in your favor is to remember the potential effects that they can have on players so that, the next time an opponent suffers one, you will be aware of his potential vulnerabilities and able to capitalize should he be unable to harness his emotions.

Bad beats can actually work in your favour and provide you with a killer advantage.  This simple trick will let you beat the opponent every time, especially if combined with a killer tool, an automatic poker calculator.  Find out more and download your free automatic poker calculator here.  Combined with your skills and a Free WSOP entry, this tool could win you a million or more.

March 30, 2010

Poker Language: Some Common Poker Terms And Language And What They Mean

Poker uses a number of distinct terms and phrases. When playing at a table it is often helpful to understand these. There are almost enough to write a poker language dictionary! Some of the more common terms are listed below:

poker language image

Pair of aces - Pocket rockets

  • Flop – most commonly associated with Texas Hold’em and Omaha poker, this poker language term refers to the first 3 open cards which are dealt.
  • Turn – this is the fourth open card which is dealt in Texas Hold’em or Omaha poker.
  • River – the final card which is dealt in a game of poker.
  • Nuts – at a given point in a poker game, this refers to the strongest possible hand.
  • Big blind – usually payable by the player sitting 2 spaces clockwise from the dealer, regardless of his cards. Blind refers to the fact that the player has to make it regardless of his cards, or as though he hadn’t even seen them.
  • Small blind – the amount payable by the player sitting next to the dealer, in a clockwise direction. It is often half the amount of the big blind.
  • Bluff – in poker language, the art of representing (usually through betting patterns) that a player has a stronger hand than he actually does.
  • Call – remaining in a hand by matching the previous bet.
  • Raise – increasing the bet which has been made by the previous player. Other players then need to call or re-raise in order to remain in the game.
  • Re-raise – the act of raising a previous raise.
  • Fold – in poker language, this is the procedure followed by a player who does not wish to continue with his hand (he does not want to pay to stay in the hand – usually because he has weak cards or believes another player has stronger ones).
  • Pot – this is the amount of chips / money which has been put into the center of the table and which the winning player will receive (subject to the rake).
  • Rake – this is a commission taken out of the pot by the casino.  Lower the rake, the more you make.  The lowest rake is currently at PKR (Click to join)
  • Straight – in poker language, a poker hand containing 5 consecutive cards.
  • Flush – a poker hand containing 5 cards of the same suit.
  • Pair – two cards of the same value.
  • Trips – three cards of the same value.
  • Quads – four cards of the same value.
  • Kicker – the highest card in a player’s hand which is not in a pair. It is quite often used to determine close hands – for example, a pair of Kings with an Ace kicker beats a pair of Kings with a 2 kicker.

Many more terms can be found in the online Poker Glossary.

March 19, 2010

Learning To Play Poker – Tips When Bluffing

If you are learning to play poker then, at some stage, you will need to add the art of bluffing into your game. Bluffing, put simply, is the act of representing that you are holding a stronger hand than you actually are. It is a technique which is performed better – and therefore more often used – by some players than others.

Learning

Poker player who looks a little bit like Madonna

  • Use the ‘semi-bluff’ first when learning to play poker. A semi-bluff involves falsely representing that you have an excellent hand, in cases when you have quite a good hand. Take the case where 3 hearts, including the 10, have appeared on the flop and you are holding another 10. If you make a large raise, you are representing to the other players that you hold 2 hearts and have a flush. In actual fact, you have a pair of 10s, which is a much weaker hand but not an outrageous bluff. You will be able to draw some confidence from the fact that you have a hand which could win and this might be sensed and misread by other players as the flush. Also, if you are called, it is not entirely clear whether you have made a bluff and your competitors might be left confused by the type of player you are.
  • If you have been recently caught bluffing, take care with future plays. Remember that other players will have now formed an opinion of the type of player you are, which might make them more likely to call you on a future bluff. Note, however, that you might also be able to turn this into a positive by fleecing them for more money when you have a very strong hand.
  • When learning to play poker you will encounter many different styles of play. On a new table you will find it helpful to assess your competitors before deciding whether to bluff. You are more likely to get away with a bluff on a table where most of the players are tight and more easily frightened off by a raise. However, good tight players will obviously play strong hands so try to assess the confidence of the table before deciding to bluff.
  • Practice bluffing skills at a poker room where the initial stakes are very low, or where you can play tournaments for free, for example at 888 Poker.
  • Consider whether you might have a ‘tell’ and if so, whether you are able to conceal it. Another part of learning to play poker is to understand the strengths and weaknesses of your own game. Some players are wonderfully intuitive about reading other players. If you think you are giving something away in your body language the following might help:
    • Consider wearing sunglasses to the table if you are allowed. If not, on big hands stare directly down on the table (regardless of whether you are bluffing or not).
    • Play online poker rooms to largely discount the effect of the ‘tell’.
  • Bluffs can be made more effectively if you are nearer the end of the betting round, when you have assessed other players’ confidence. Remember this when learning to play poker.

To become an expert poker player you need to understand bluffs and common poker tells.  Alex Mayer provides free unbiased poker advice including psychology  of poker on the First Poker Tips Poker blog

March 15, 2010

Poker Hand Rankings: A Simple Guide To The Order Of Poker Hands

It is a fundamental requirement of playing poker that the player understands poker hand rankings, i.e. the order of priority of different hands. As well as being required to determine who has won a particular pot, it is also necessary to understand the hands which other players might be representing and therefore whether you think you can beat them. Different hands are listed below in order of priority, 1. being the best.

  1. Royal flush – top of the poker hand rankings is the royal flush, being Ace, King, Queen, Jack and 10 suited.
  2. Straight flush – this is 5 consecutive suited cards, e.g. 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of spades. This particular example is a straight to the 7, which would be beaten by a straight to the 8.
  3. Four of a kind – this is simply 4 cards of the same value, e.g. 4 Jacks. Note that 4 Queens would beat 4 Jacks.
  4. Full house – a triplet (3 cards of the same value) and a pair (2 cards of the same value), e.g. 3 Queens and a pair of 7s.
  5. Flush – any 5 cards of the same suit.
  6. Straight – any 5 consecutive cards which are not suited (since, if they were suited, the hand would be a straight flush).
  7. 3 of a kind – very simply, triplets (3 cards of the same value). 3 Aces beat 3 Kings.
  8. 2 pair – also very simply, this is 2 separate pairs. Note that there is no better position in the poker hand rankings for 3 pairs, since this is a total of 6 cards and only your best 5 count.
  9. Pair – simply 2 cards of the same value and, as usual, a high value pair beats a lower value pair.
  10. High card – bottom of the poker hand rankings is the high card. This is simply the highest card from a hand of 5 that has not placed any better combination. So an Ace, 10, 6, 4 and 3 off suit would be called Ace high.

When calculating who has won a particular hand remember that it is only the best 5 cards that count – if 2 players draw with these 5 cards it does not go to who has got the strongest sixth card, and the pot is split.  If you are struggling to maintain the importance of poker hand rankings then using a free download poker calculator is a great option.  The tools will sit alongside your chosen poker room and provide guidance on which hand to play in each situation.

Author

Alex Mayer is a Poker playing professional who issues her tips and strategy knowledge and Poker Room Reviews at http://www.firstpokertips.co.uk. Hundreds of great tips available on everything from poker hand rankings to bluffing.