Poker Strategy
What is the best poker strategy? Online poker is complex. It's complex, not because of its rules, but because of its variables: human behavior and ever-changing odds. There's no doubt that luck plays a major role in short term poker success but over the long run, poker is certainly a game of skill. Like any classic game of skill, poker demands study and practice from those who want to achieve mastery.
Playing (& Winning) Online Poker
by Steve Badger
The following is taken from Steve Badger's "Winner's Guide
to Online Poker" available on his website
http://www.playwinningpoker.com/
Online Tells. The "in turn"
buttons lead to one of the most obvious of tells unique to
online poker. If the blinking light representing a player
acts immediately, it's likely this person has clicked the
box of an "in turn" action. It is usually easy to determine
when a player has a no-brainer hand. The immediate "check"
is often incredibly revealing. If you are first to act, and
take a moment before checking, and your three opponents
immediately check behind you like rifle fire, this is a tell
as big as Texas. They ain't got nuthin'.
Another common situation... the first player takes a moment,
and then finally checks. You have the "bet/raise in turn"
button checked, so your bet appears, but instantly the
player next to you raises. Uh-oh, he had the bet/raise
button checked also, and didn't care what you or the first
player did. That tells a lot more than a just normal raise
would -- an awful lot more.
Besides the speed of action resulting from using the
buttons, other online tells can be discerned from how slow a
player commonly acts on their hand. Players who are
consistently super-slow (rude human speedbumps) are very
likely not paying attention to the game, either because they
are playing two games and are not competent at it, or
because they are doing other work at home. Either way, if
all of a sudden this person plays a hand crisply and
promptly and aggressively... well, they got somethin'.
"The Stall" is a common tell among average or slightly below
average players. When the last card in Holdem or Omaha makes
a coordinated board (making a nut hand like a flush), the
mediocre player pauses as if thinking, and then finally
bets. This pause almost always means "powerhouse" or at
least that the bettor thinks he has a powerhouse. It's a
comically inept tell in its obviousness.
The Lobby. Working the lobby is almost as important
as working the game you play. In casino poker you can walk
around the room, briefly look at all the games and limits
being played, and study what type of game each one is. Much
more accurately and quickly, the online lobby offers a
wealth of information just by clicking buttons: average pot
size, number of players seeing the flop, how many hands
played per hour, names of the players in each game, who is
on the waiting list, how many games of a particular limit
are underway, and which players are playing two games.
Each one of these bits of information is something we can
use to choose the right game and limit. Some people prefer a
wild game. Some prefer a more passive one. Some like full
games; some like short-handed. Players who are nearly
equally competent in all games can choose between twenty or
more games at the limit they want to play. Game and table
selection is a critical part of casino poker, but it is even
more fundamentally important online. At first glance it
might seem that table selection is less important online
because it is extremely easy to move from one game to
another. I think that really is just an argument for why
table selection is more important. The tools are available
for players to be constantly aware of where the good games
are. Constant vigilance is a price of winning online.
When signing up for games, never choose the "any game" at
this limit option. This hamstrings your ability to
independently manipulate your position on each sign-up list.
For instance, if you've signed up for any $15/30 Holdem
game, and your name comes to the top of the list in a game
filled with players you don't want to play with, if you pass
this game, you are removed from all the $15/30 lists.
Likewise, if you rise to the top of the list on a game that
doesn't look good now, but has potential because of others
behind you on the waiting list, you may want to unjoin that
list and then rejoin again at the bottom -- perhaps when
your name, now seventh, rises to the top, the game will be
good. If you've signed up for "any game," that option is not
available to you. You simply will be put at the bottom of
every single list you are on.
At the busy online cardrooms, you have many options to
choose from, and a lot of information to use in choosing.
Don't restrict yourself. Look for the games that fit with
your style of play. When your game texture changes from
favorable to mediocre or worse, cruise the lobby for greener
pastures. Keep constantly vigilant. Knowledge is power.
Playing winning online poker is the science, craft and art
of mastering things most players don't even think about
