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FEATURE
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The Inside Straight
- Andrew N.S. Glazer
Too Warm - Too Cold - Just Right
I recently watched a friend play some very high stakes Internet Poker.
He was playing two games at once, one a $100-200 hold’em game and the
other an $80-160 Omaha eight-or-better game.

So much for my early thoughts that Internet Poker wouldn’t be climbing
over the $20-40 level anytime in the next few years. At least one of
the two sites involved is allaying any collusion fears by having a
full time host watch over play. This isn’t practical for 40 different
tables, but if your site has only one $100-200 game going, one host scrutinising the action seems reasonable.
The first question I had for my friend was, “How can you play two
games at once for such high stakes?” He laughed and pointed out
several other well known players in the games, “X plays four games at
a time, and Y over there plays as many as eight at a time.”
“Aside from slowing the action down, doesn’t playing that many games
cost these guys an edge?” I asked. “I tried playing just two games at
once when I first started playing on the internet, and eventually I
gave it up. I couldn’t study my opponents tendencies as much as I
wanted to, and lots of times it made it harder to remember how the
action had gone in one game or the other.”
Resisting the urge to explain why these difficulties made me a much
better writer than player, my friend admitted that there could be a
little something to this. “Yeah, sometimes I lose a little bit of
information on one game because I’m playing two,” he said, “but if my
hourly rate per game suffers a little bit, my total win per hour from
playing two games is still better than it would be for one, so I do
it,” he said.
My friend plays poker for a living, and he had identified the key
issue for his ‘professional’ approach to poker. He was playing the
number of games that maximised his total hourly win rate, even if it
meant that he wasn’t quite bashing each game for the maximum. As a
pro, he wasn’t concerned with non cash matters like how much he was
learning, or how much fun he was having. He looked directly at the
bottom line.
When I made the decision to play one game rather than two or more, I
was looking at my bottom line also. In a setting where win rates are
usually expressed in terms of big bets won per hour, with one big bet
per hour nicely acceptable and two superb, I found that playing two
games usually resulted in at least one mistake per hour. Sometimes
these mistakes cost me merely one bet, and sometimes they cost me
entire pots. While the ‘perfect poker player’ might well have been
able to play two or more games with nearly equal facility, my
empirical experience had taught me that I wasn’t the perfect Internet
Poker player.

If you play Internet Poker, you face the same ‘Goldilocks’ question -
How many games are too many, how many are too few, and how many are
just right … for your unique collection of skills, desires, and
personality quirks.
“Hold the phone!” you might say. “What do you mean, ‘desires and
personality quirks’? I play poker for money, just like your
‘professional’ friend. I should play the number of games that
maximizes my total win, shouldn’t I?”
That’s true enough if the only reason you play Poker is for the money,
but let’s face it, if money were the only reason we all played Poker,
the overwhelming majority of us would be very unhappy people, because
the very best players combine with the rake to make it difficult for
most of us to win long term.
Reasons why people might play online other than their short term
financial results include, but are not limited to, using Internet
Poker as :
• A learning experience for larger games or live games
• A pleasant diversion from the day’s activities
• A way to fill up time in between other kinds of computer work
Playing two or more games at once isn’t necessarily the best way to
accomplish any of these goals, especially the first one. People who
are still living at the early part of the Poker learning curve
probably don’t do themselves a favour by playing multiple games. A
large part of the learning process for beginners and intermediates
involves raising their awareness of many issues that experienced
players take for granted, and it’s hard to maintain that raised
awareness when you’re flying back and forth between games.
Sometimes a personality trait/quirk argues in favour of playing more
than one game. Recently I was playing in a $5-10 hold’em game at a new
site. That’s a bit lower than I like to play, but I was mostly
interested in investigating software and the site interface under game
conditions. The game was amazingly tight for a $5-10 game. It might
have been $500-1,000 for the relative lack of multi-way action. My
chip total refused to move much either up or down, and after a while I
caught myself saying, “I couldn’t win a big pot in this game if my
life depended on it.”
I quit playing, because such a statement is a sure sign of impatience,
and impatience is a sure precursor to losing. Even though I had
thought I was playing in order to investigate the site, my “action
gene” seemed active, and this wasn’t an action game.
Had I been playing in two games at once, the relative lack of action
in this one game wouldn’t have been nearly as big a problem, because
I’d have another game to look to whenever I tossed my hand away in the
tight game. If you know yourself to be the impatient type, you’re
probably in trouble as a Poker player, but you can avoid some trouble
by playing online in multiple games.
(Of course, someone who isn’t happy with one tight $5-10 game doesn’t
have to choose between quitting for the night and playing two games.
He can always just switch tables, a matter that’s often easier online
than in a brick-and-mortar card room. Just because one $5-10 game at a
site is tight at the moment doesn’t mean they all will be. Oftentimes,
just one or two players can radically change a game’s nature.
Those players who know themselves to be impatient don’t necessarily
have to play two or more games though. I know at least one player who
does a lot of computer work at home, and can play one game in the
background while he works. His need to spend most of his time on work
dovetails nicely with the proper approach to Poker, throwing most of
his starting hands away. Each time he throws a hand away, he gets some
work done, and he avoids getting involved with quite a few substandard
starting hands that way.
Whether you play $0.25-0.50 or $100-200, there is an optimal number of
online games for you. Take a long, hard look at precisely what you are
trying to accomplish and why, and you’ll soon enough figure out how
many games you should be playing.
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