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Omaha Hi-LO Home Game for Poker

Poker

In my $2-$4 Omaha hi-lo home game, we had a disagreement that still needs a ruling for next time around. On the river bet, 1st man to act makes a $2 all-in bet. What is the $ play for player 2 who wants to raise? I voted to have player 2 make the all-in bet a full bet and raise making it $8 to player 3. The table out voted me saying the raise should make it $6 to player 3. What do the pro’s say?

Answer 1:

Find the Best Online Slots UK at Roxy Palace. We never had ‘all-in’ in home games but that was always with close friends. In many casinos, if the all-in bet is half or more of a full bet, it is considered a raise and the next player may then make a full raise so it would be $6 to the next player.

Answer 2:
This is where the Half-in rule is applied. If a player makes an all-in bet or raise equal to, or greater than 1/2 of the current structure it is considered a full raise. The next player may either call that bet, or call and make another FULL raise. The original bettor may raise again if they want. If a player makes an all-in bet or raise LESS than 1/2 of the current structure, it is NOT considered a raise. The next player may either call that bet or complete the raise. The player who is first to act bettor may only CALL the less than 1/2 all-in if no other player re-raises before the action gets back to the first player.
Example: Player A checks (or bets a full bet) Player B makes a less than 1/2 bet( or raise) Remaining players call all-in bet Action returns to player A…he may only call.

Answer 3:

That was a very good description. I did work in one poker room where the next player after an all in bet had to complete the bet or fold. After completing, #1 if 1/2 or more was bet he could raise, #2 if the bet was less then 1/2 he could not. This was only in one poker room.

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Facts Relating Paradise Poker Games

Poker

In my continued effort to rationalize the coincidental occurrence of my worst losing streak in 20+ years of playing poker and my virgin foray into online play, I ask the following question: How do we know that “Big Louie” from Tucson is actually a real person and not a computer shill with “supernatural luck” created by Paradise to enhance their return on capital?

Answer 1:

You do not. They don’t provide a means to verify that electronic shills aren’t used. You can’t even ping an external IP address (for privacy reasons, I’d surmise), and if you could Ping and just get a response time, instead of seeing the IP address, that could be easily faked. Short of having access to actual traceroutes of the players, and asking them directly “are you playing Paradise Poker”, about the only way one can tell a player is real is by Turing-testing the player in the chat window. Players that tend to chat it up are probably human. Players, who have NEVER been seen chatting, may be suspect. If you wonder, try to ask a player a random question, like “How’s the weather in Tucson” (one which you can readily verify), and see if you get a response.

Answer 2:

I know of several people (myself included) who tried Paradise Poker and reported the same results as many who post here.  They won at first; then started to lose.  They all report an unreal number of bad beats and fantastic draw-outs.  We all reached the same conclusion:  we’re sticking to playing in real casinos.  Nobody knows if everything is on the square or not, but if you don’t play, you can’t lose.  I, for one, am done with on-line poker at this time.  Of course, I have access to several card rooms here in so. Cal., so it’s easy not to play on-line.

Answer 3:

I think that if Paradise,  the # 1 online poker site was crooked, Doug Grant would have exposed them by now.

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Caro’s Pro Poker Tells Video

Poker

I’m very interested in non-verbal language. Do you think Caro’s Pro Poker Tells Video will be interesting to me, or is it only interesting for a poker player?

Answer 1:

Some of the specific examples apply to poker only, but the general indicators will no doubt be helpful in real life. I know I have used my poker experience in real life to determine when someone is lying or attempting to deceive me.

Answer 2:

i know this is krazy but ,here i go…on discovery (late nite)there was a guy who discovered 4 tells (body)signals of horses. He could communicate based on the horse tells…what this enabled him to do is break a unbroken horse in less then an hour. Other then corralling it in(horses are pray animals and don’t like that)he broke them with no discomfort to the horse.

Answer 3:

The only reason that I passes a Russian history class in college is because the prof used 100 question – true/false verbal tests. I had a great tell on him when he was giving a false answer. I guess he felt so bad about lying about history that he would immediate glance up and see who he tricked.

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How to Become a Professional Poker Player

Poker

If one wanted to be a professional poker player. Where would be the best state for one to live in?
Answer 1:
Rumor is that when CA opens big integrated site in fall/summer that it will be resmoking. I have no idea how valid this rumor is, but I wouldn’t move here right away. Plus the games I’m in are real tough..
Answer 2:
Your criteria should be:
#1 No smoking.
#2 Good games (either tourists or poker is new to area)
#3 Low rake.
Answer 3:
At Casino Arizona, there are anywhere from 1 to 3 tables of 20/40 holdem….usually a table or two of 15/30 stud. On the weekends there are sometimes higher games.

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A Good Poker Magazine- Poker Europa

Poker

Can anyone recommend a good poker magazine? I do enjoy the freebie “Card Player”, but I am sure there are more out there that may have good articles. (Or maybe they suck! That’s why I ask.)

Answer 1:

If you are from Europe, then Poker Europa is a good read. You can find articles at www.european-poker.com or eppa.bigfoot.com (same site, two URLs).
Answer 2:
It’s not unusual for what are known as “controlled circulation” magazines — if you don’t live in the free zone, you pay for them. I work for a magazine that has free distribution within metro Toronto. If you live outside Toronto, you have to pay to subscribe. It’s a perfectly normal industry practice.
Answer 3:
Probably for the same reason that casinos like Foxwoods overcharge so much for the cash price of a room or food at their restaurants. They know most will be camped. And they want those who get the comps to feel as if they are getting something really valuable free. Also the casinos who give you the magazine free are the ones paying for most of the ads. With a high nominal price, they can think that they are handing out valuable magazines. (Wonder what they pay per copy distributed, if anything?)

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Good Poker Centered Movies

Poker

Besides Rounders and the Cincinatti Kid any good, poker-centered movies out there?

Answer 1:

It’s a *great* movie! The poker in it is terrible, but the movie is great. The scene where everyone looks at their hands when Henry Fonda is forced to go all in is my favorite.

Answer 2:

We run this thread about once a year here’s the most recent list. BTW, The Sting is not a movie about gambling — it’s a movie about conmen and cheating at gambling (Newman rigs the initial cardgame, and there is not actual betting on horse racing, just another set up.) And the consensus is that the poker scenes in the Maverick film are ridiculous, which they are, from that perspective. Jodie Foster is charming, though.

Answer 3:

I watched The Grifters about a month ago for about the sixth time. A favorite. How does it fit? There are no poker scenes in it, and the subplot about fixing the odds at race tracks is kind of tangential.

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