|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Donkaments > Cash Games?
After taking some pretty harsh losses in 6-max limit this month, i've started playing more donkaments (mostly on Stars) and it's going pretty well. My Pokertracker doesn't seem to handle tourney results very well, so I track my stats via Sharkscope.com (screenshot attached).
Too anyone who's played a lot of SNGs (JD? TP?), what buy-in level seems to be the best value (i.e. best stakes to average player's skill ratio)? $50-$100?? sj |
#2
|
||||
|
||||
I am not the person to ask about that.... I haven't played a SNG for ages and ages.
My GUESS, however, would be that the lowest buy in that has the best juice (ie, 10+1 = 10%; 5+1 = 20%) would be the softest. Then again, if you are good enough to beat the $100 SNGs, for example, you can get away with a far smaller ROI and still have a higher net win. So I guess, like everything else, it dpeneds. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
It's been months since I have played SNGs, and the highest I ever played was the $60 turbos (which were definately profitable if I continued to play them). I've heard from others that play SNGs regularly that the skill level is pretty equivalent at the $50-$100 level, but there is a big jump up at the $200 level.
|
#5
|
||||
|
||||
I play primarily SNGs on 'Stars and Doyle's Room
'Stars for the first half of the year I had a 39.5% ITM and 20.4% ROI at the $50 + 5 singles over 350 tourneys. I've since cashed out most of my BR and am now building up again from the $10 + 1 area. There's a definite break point at the 20-30 level on 'Stars where you'll rarely see someone donk off their entire stack during level 1, but at the 30-50 range, the players are not as random as the lower levels so you can narrow hand ranges down better (but they play the hands better, so its sort of a wash). At Doyle's, the 10's are much softer than the 10's at 'Stars and you have 4 different level structures to choose from (3 min., 5 min., 8 min., 12 min.). The downside is the games don't go as frequently.
__________________
"Animals die, friends die, and I shall die. But the one thing that will never die is the reputation I leave behind." Old Norse adage |
|
|