#1
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Home game question: how many times can you reraise?
Home game question: how many times can you reraise?
We have always played that as long as you have money that you reraise the other guy; the amount of times didn’t matter. We had a new kid at the game. He said that I it bet and the other guy in the hand raised me, I only had the ability to call on that round of betting. Is this true? Is there a similar rule that he could be confused about? This is a cash game. But if it is true for a tourney, like would be interested in that also. Also does a raise have to at least double the previous bet? |
#2
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If the game is NL (no-limit) you can raise as much as you want, hence the "no" limit. The only money going into the pot will big the maximum number your oppenent has. For example you have 500 in chips, and he has 250. You get it all in on four different bets, then only 250 + 250 is in the pot.
Limit is the game where you can only bet so much, or "cap" it
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"I love this freak-ing game" |
#3
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The only time you cannot reraise in NL is if you don't have any money left to bet, or if there is a shortstack that reraised but is less than the original bet (so if you are playing .5/1 and you raise to 3 and a shortstack moves all-in for 4, you as the initial bettor cannot reraise any more even if other players call the bet).
In limit, the house decides how many bets you can put in. Online, the cap is usually set at 4, but there is no rule against having no cap. |
#4
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How old are you and why are you playing with "kids?"
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Get well soon, MCA! |
#5
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I have seen in limit, if it gets to two players (heads up) having no limit on raises (in the Monte Carlo, Las Vegas)
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I can only be Me, 'cause that is who I am! |
#6
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Ditto. But I'm not sure if that's a universal rule or a depends-on-what-casino you're in type of rule. I think, at least in the peasant 2-4 limits I play at, there's a four-bet cap and then, if it gets heads up, no cap on the end.
In other words, with preflop and flop betting, the raises stop after $8. With turn betting, it's $16. On the river, if it's heads up, there's no cap. But if it's not heads up, I think there is. Of course, I could be wrong, too.
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"I need to catch a couple of killer, monster hands and have two or three callers." |
#7
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Here's the rundown of the game from my blog. It will give you an idea. And I'm not bragging that I'm the best at the table. My coworkers couldn't tell you what an out is much less think about how many they have and why that matters. I feel bad sometimes - really I do. 2006 stats from fishbowl games: earned $821.00 – 18 wins/3 losses. Funny factoid: they pick on my Talking Poker hat and jokingly point to it and call me poker star in an iratating voice when I win a hand. Most are younger than me and worry about how the look and wear Fox hats and other stuff like that. They pick on me because it's a poker hat and that wouldn't be excepted in their circle. I tell them that I paid $175 for that hat, just sit there drinking my beers while wearing my hat, picking back at them about their insecurities, and taking their money about once a month.
It's kinda long. first paragraph will tell you how old the "kids" were. I call them kids because there is a generation gap between us in every way, and I'm only 31. Fish bowl game didn’t workout in my favor as usual. Ouch. I didn’t actually lose a lot. The lost profits are what really hurt. Crazy night. Biggest game yet. 9 people showed up. The usual and 2 new guys were in attendance. A regular’s younger brother and his young friend; I’m guessing 21 to 23 year’s old. One sucked like his brother. LOL. The brother’s friend AJ knew how to play, but was a fish no less, just not small fry. The thing was I could spot that he was the 2nd best player at the table besides me. I stayed away from him and watched his game. I really had nothing to fight with anyway. He might have pushed me off a hand or two. He knew how to check-raise and value bet, so he had some skills. The kid’s big problem was trying to muscle out the fish bowl’s calling-stations. He would play solid poker and then blow it all on a huge semi-bluffs, which were called with marginal holding and taken down. I saw him have A8 and reraise allin, which was a huge overbet, with 3 spades on the flop. His Ace was a spade, plus he had middle pr with the 8. EP bet. MP raised. He pushed with his marginal hand + the possible. EP dropped. MP thought about it for merely a second and tossed in the huge call with TPSK. The kicker was like a 3 or something sad like that. I would have folded to that bet in a heartbeat. But Phil called, no spade came and he took down the pot. AJ kinda ran his mouth about the call, but of course I said good call Phil, way to not let him bluff you. It was a horrible call but, but hey that is how I usually make my money. He did a similar semi-bluff move later in the night and was called down. He bought in for $30 and ended up buying back in for $20 or$30 more. He ended around $40 up for the night because he won the last 2 hands of the night. All in all, he was an alright player. He was the only guy at the table that I would have to watch really close if we got in a hand together. I’m sure it will happen sooner or later, because he won some money and he saw the soft game, where he sees some easy money potential. He’ll be back. Kinda sucks having someone else with skill horning in on my fish game. LOL. Oh yea, he won the last 2 hands both on the river to boot. He was the aggressor the whole time and came from behind on the river to win it. One I would have been raising also just like him, but the other one was a strong-armed bluff hand that ended with a nice river. We played for 4 hrs and I won 4 hands all night. That is super card dead. One of the hands I won was a nice pot. I had 2 horrible hands that took my total for the night to $52 in the hole. 10 min into the game I look down at AA. Phil to my immediate right raised PF. I triple that bet. My ISO works and everyone folds back to Phil who calls. Flop comes K-high. He bets out and I raise big; he calls. Turn is x-small. He bets again. I push and he calls. He turns over pocket cowboys and shoots my $30 down with a flopped set that cracked my Aces. With him leading out every street I probably should have just called him down and took a semi-small ass-whippin’. But with some of the crap these guys play and bet with I just had a hard time slowing down here. I watched him lose a huge pot later where he kept leading out the whole hand with pocket ducks. When the other guy scooped the pot he didn’t see his play as folly. Once again that is why I usually cash every game. The other hand that totally killed me was where my nut straight got river by a paired board. Flop comes 987rainbow. I check, Chris bets, and I raise a nice smite. He calls. Turn comes an A. I lead out big-time. He calls. River comes another 8. I push the last little amount that remains in my stack. He calls and turns over 98 for the 2 paired boat special. The 4 outer. That really hurt. So if, if, if, I would have won those 2 hands I likely would have been up $75 or so. I am happy with my play. My loss was due more to two tough hands than me playing poorly. Quick rundown of the night’s winners. AJ sucked out 2 big hands on the every last 2 hands of the night to go from do $40. AJ, if he comes back will win more often than lose, I think. He’ll win a lot if he learns to not bluff the calling-stations. Chris was the big winner with about $120. He rivered that huge hand off me. He also rivered a few more hands throughout the night with crap that panned-out in the end. But most of his money came because he had good cards all night and played them hard. He is the one player that is getting better every time we play. And then there is Philly-Dilly-Dilly-My-Boy. He won $75. That is only like the second time that he has won. They remember their wins more than the pain of tons of loses, so he will be back often. Phil is a fish that will never get better and I don’t have the patience to teach him. He still tries to check from every position PF. Oh, I forgot, so I have to put in $.50 to see the flop, damn. One key hand was the last hand of the night. I was not in this hand. Flop comes AJx. AJ had AJ. Maki had JJ. VH had A8. Bets. Turn x with bigger bets. River A. Everyone went allin. VH with trip Aces. Maki with JJJAA. AJ with AAAJJ. Ouch. Last edited by ashmc2; 01-29-07 at 06:43 AM. |
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