Miami, FL (PRWeb) June 26, 2007 – Within one day of releasing its new Bad Beat Jackpot game, Absolute Poker doled out nearly $78,000 to five lucky Absolute Poker players after the very first jackpot was hit.
Less than 48 hours later, it was déjà vu for players of the new online poker game as the jackpot bells tolled once again.
“This is proof that Absolute Poker has taken the lead in making online poker more lucrative,” stated David Clainer, senior vice president for Absolute Poker. “When you can lose a hand and walk away with tens of thousands of dollars, it’s pretty amazing.”
The first Bad Beat Jackpot was won early Saturday morning by CGA11 who lost quad tens to NEDKELLY’s straight flush. In traditional Texas Hold’em, CGA11 would have walked away from the table with nothing but a whole lot of anger. However, at a Bad Beat Jackpot table, when a player loses a hand holding four eights (8888) or anything better, they win the largest piece of the Bad Beat Jackpot. In CGA11’s case, that meant nearly $40,000 for his losing hand. All players who were seated at the table where the bad beat occurred also shared in the jackpot.
History repeated itself early Monday morning when MARKM3451 lost four of a kind to WHITETAIL0’s king high straight flush, losing the hand but winning nearly $13,000 by hitting the jackpot.
Absolute Poker is the only online poker site open to U.S. players to feature Bad Beat Jackpot tables. Full details on the latest addition to Absolute Poker’s suite of poker games can be found at www.absolutepoker.com/badbeatpoker/.
Tuesday, June 26, 2007
Bad Beat Jackpot at Absolute Poker
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Big Jim Slade
at
6:48 PM
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Sunday, June 24, 2007
Online Poker Room - Absolute Poker - launches a Bad Beat Jackpot, adding a new spin to their Texas Hold'em poker game.
Miami, June 24 2007.- Absolute Poker today announced the launch of Bad Beat Jackpot - a new spin on Texas Hold'em that lets players walk away with a hefty profit after hitting a 'bad beat' at the online poker tables.
"We're taking away the pain delivered by bad beats by throwing money at their victims," stated David Clainer, senior vice president for Absolute Poker. "Who knew losing big could feel so good?"
In poker, the term 'bad beat' refers to losing a hand that is clearly favored to win. But at the Bad Beat Jackpot tables, losing a seemingly unbeatable hand just got more lucrative.
Now, when seated at a Bad Beat Jackpot table, if a player loses a hand holding four twos (2222) or anything better, they'll win a piece of the Bad Beat Jackpot.
To kick off the new online poker game, Absolute Poker is putting $100,000 into the jackpot. To help it build, $0.50 will be collected from qualifying hands at Bad Beat Jackpot tables. The jackpot will keep growing until someone hits a qualifying bad beat, at which time a large percentage of it will be distributed among the bad beat victim and the players at the online poker table where the bad beat occurred (a small fraction of the jackpot will remain in the pot and another minuscule piece of it will be dedicated to administration costs).
Bad Beat Jackpot tables will be noted with the word "jackpot" written in brackets after the table name and will be categorized in red text. Complete details on Absolute Poker's Bad Beat Jackpot.
Visit Absolute Poker for more information.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
8:19 PM
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Friday, June 22, 2007
Winning By Not Playing
As a joke I started a new strategy in online poker. And to my surprise, it is working. What I do is not play. By not playing I get more chips.
Specifically, I enter single table tournaments then mark the "away next hand" box. I sit there and get blinded out, but otherwise I lose nothing. Well, I gain nothing as well. But surprisingly, I end up winning more chips on average than I pay in buy-ins.
So what makes this happen? At first I jokingly came up with the idea that If I did not play, and play badly so as to lose chips, I would have more chips if I just came to the table late. One way to achieve this online is to start the tourney, then walk away. In fact right now I am (not) playing in a STT while I type this message. The game runs in the background. I saw my hand get dealt AQ, so I quickly hit the "I am back" button and went on to win 4,000 in chips in one hand. Then I left the table again.
There is no way to win first place using this strategy, unless I actually play in the game. But it seems I almost always make it to the money. STT's pay the top three and since I have essentially no time invested in this any win is a good win. On the abandoned game I am playing right now I am the chip leader of five payers based on the one hand I won. With the big blind at $30, my $4,320 in chips will not be blinded out anytime soon.
I have foudn that once it gets to two or thress players, I am in the money and can then go on to actually play and often win if I want. Since I have already made my goal of being in the money I can play very agressive against tight players who think they were there to win. I'm just there to get in the bubble.
So why does this work? A friend suggested that maybe online players are just bad poker players. I don't think so. I think online players are agressive. Too agressive for their own good. So an ultra passive player will tend to beat the average online player. How much more passive can you get than "away from the table"?
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
6:18 PM
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Thursday, June 21, 2007
Caesars Galdiator Games
At Caesars Atlantic City, their poker tournaments are called Gladiator Games. They have a points system for the tournaments that will award a free entry in the WSOP Circuit event to be held at Caesars. You earn one point for entering a tournament, then you get another point for every position they pay out in the tournament.
For instance with a 40 person tournament and paying out five people, if you get 1st place you get 6 points. I don't have all of the details, but they schedule a free roll tournament for the top points people, maybe inviting 100 people of which 60 might show up. It might require you have 16 or 17 points to get into the freeroll. Then they "payout" the top finishers with vouchers for entry into the local WSOP Circuit event.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
10:32 AM
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Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Northern Virginia's Top Poker Winner Announced
For the NOVA Poker Group's spring 2007 quarter, Robert Costner has emerged as the player to win the most tournaments. This makes Robert one of the best poker players in Northern Virginia and the Washington, D.C. area. Robert has placed first in 40% of all money tournaments he has played for the quarter.
The question is often asked, is poker a game of skill or a game of chance? To repeatedly win two out of five of every multi-table tournaments played, Robert shows that it is skill, not just luck that makes a poker win. The alternative is to suggest that Robert is the luckiest poker player in Northern Virginia.
The NOVA Poker group (NPG) is a group of amateur poker players who host weekly home games. NOVA stands for Northern Virginia. Home poker tournaments without a rake, such as those held by NPG, are 100% legal in Virginia. NPG holds a tournament every Tuesday night and also holds tournaments each weekend, usually on a Friday or Saturday.
Robert Costner is an Arlington, Virginia resident who plays in or runs about 500 Texas Hold'em poker tournaments per year. Robert has won in bar games, home games, internet tournaments, and casino tournaments. He can be found playing at casinos such as Showboat and Harrah's in Atlantic City, as well as various bars and restaurants in the local northern Virginia area.
For more information, contact Jim Slade at (703) 531-1995.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
4:06 PM
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Labels: home game, poker, texas hold'em
Monday, May 28, 2007
MyBorgata Website Registration
How do I register on the MyBorgata website? Wht does the website say my card number birthdate combination is incorrect?
After my first visit to the Borgata Casino in Atlantic City, I tried several times to register on the website. My registration failed every time. I asked at the My Borgata desk, but they said they had no infomration about the website. I called customer support a couple of weeks later and it turns out that if you enter the id number from you Red Label card it will not work. You have to enter your number, but leave off the leading zeros.
Since I only play poker I only had seven dollars of comps, one dollar for each hour I had played $1/$2 no limt poker. The iste said I needed 1,000 more points to get a Black Label card. But I have seven points. Why don't I need 993 points? Why do I still need 1,000 points when I already have seven points?
For that question I got the answer from a Casino Host. Yes, I do get one point for every hour I play poker. While it is displyed on the website as comp dollars, it is not subtracted from my points needed to get the Black Label card. At least not on the web site. If I were to actually qualify for the Black Label card then a human woudl manually resolve the point problem.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
10:22 AM
1 comments
Labels: casinos
Wednesday, May 23, 2007
Showboat throwing away Rewards points
According to Carolyn George who was running the poker room at Showboat, she threw away my comp points I earned that day because I went to the bathroom. In general I want points because this is how the casino rates me and why Harrah's gave me six free room nights each month for the last two months.
I drove up to Showboat on Tuesday morning and started playing $1/$2 no limit at 10:20 in the morning. I'm trying to learn how the points work so as Carolyn clocked me into the poker room I asked some questions about the points. Then shortly after the 11:00 tournament started I moved to the other side of the room to play there.
Apparently I can't win 1st place in every tournament and I busted out after about an hour and a half. So I went back to the desk and asked for a no limit table. At this point Carolyn, perhaps with a gleem in her eye, or perhaps with a bit of anger in her voice told me that I would have to clock in again because she had thrown out my card and because of that I had not received any points. She went on to tell me that she did this because I had left the poker room. She seemd a bit pleased with herself and at the same time angry with me as she told me that I had lost my points for the day.
Well, I did leave the poker room but only to go to the men's room and I came back so quickly that I didn't even miss the next hand that was dealt in the tournament.
This was a surprise to me. I was told I was supposed to have clocked out. Since she had disposed of my points only about an hour ago, I asked her if we could resolve the problem. She said no way, it was not possible. My points were lost forever.
I left the casino and went to the Tropicana to play.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
10:33 AM
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Sunday, May 20, 2007
Atlantic City Poker Wins
I've decided to start playing in casinos in Atlantic City. I've just finished my third week of trips to AC to play in Texas Hold'em poker tournaments. The first week I won the 1st place at Showboat in the Friday lunch tournament, for $1,600. The second week I won $3,060.00 for first place in the Harrah's Friday night tournament. The buy-ins were about $65 - $100 each.
The third week I did not win, but I did get quad Aces in one of the hands. I am trying to stick with the Harrah's family of casinos for now, but I did go over to the Borgata and won about $300 in six hours of $1/$2 no limit.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
1:21 PM
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Friday, March 02, 2007
Cashout Problems at Doyle's Room
Admittedly, I do think Doyle's Room is doing the best they can do. But that does not mean I am getting my money.
I'm an affiliate and I took a partial cashout shortly after they withdrew from the US market. According to their records, the funds were withdrawn from my account on 2/22/07. A week later, on 3/1/07 I recieved an email that no check had been sent and they wanted my ACH information. Well, I prefer ACH over cashier's check, so that is fine with me.
I sent the information in to them and got a reply back that I cannot have a partial cashout, but must withdraw everything or they will send my money to Full Tilt. This sound increadibly unreasonable on several fronts, including that I don't have an dealings with Full Tilt or have any sort of account with them.
After some email discussion they decided they might be able to send me my money. But they said that I need to talk to the affiliate department and run it by them.
Since they are in the process of cashing out tens of thousands of US players and I'm in the front I can't blame them for not knowing fully how they are going to handle this. But we will see what happens.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
2:54 PM
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Saturday, May 06, 2006
Changing Hot Keys Annoyance
I don't want to play with my mouse. I want to use keyboard keys to control my game. This method of user input happens to be a Windows standard and even is part of section 508 compliance.
So Doyle's Room has a feature they call hot keys. This lets you run the program without a mouse but with your function keys. The trouble is the the "hot key" changes meaning, often while you are trying to press the button.
The programmer apparently took the list of all possible actions and assinged the function keys to them in sequence. F1, F2, F3, ... But not all the possible actions, only the possible actions for the moment - this particular time and place. So the meaning of the function key can change, drastically and adversely, from minute to minute.
So just as you are about to say, check your hand, the function key for check might suddenly become "call 6,400". A very irritating morph. But to be honest, I complained and the following week the software changed. Most of the problem went away.But not all of the problem. Just look at F1. If you have just joined the game, F1 is Post Big Blind. When it is your turn to bet, F1 is fold. If it is not your turn, but you want to perform a pre-action, then F1 is Check/Fold, while Fold has no hot key. If it is time to post blinds, F1 might be Post Small Blind. This lack of consistency causes the player to feel he is less in control of his computer.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
7:23 PM
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Friday, May 05, 2006
Website Schedule Annoyance
The tournament schedule posted at http://www.doylesroom.com/tournaments/schedule.cfm is both annoying and wrong.The schedule is wrong in that if you change the time to GMT -0500 (EST) you get the correct schedule for the Hold'em $5 Giveaway tournament. But if you them change the filter from "All Tournaments" to "Free Rolls" the times get horribly skewed and the schedule is meaningless.
The page is annoying in that it uses Text boxes to present the starting tmes. So once you have the schedule in front of you (assuming it was the correct schedule) the text boxes prevent you from doing a copy and paste into another document so that you can make the information meaningful.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
6:59 PM
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Tuesday, April 11, 2006
Post Big Blind Annoyance
I've just joined a Holdem table at Doyle's Room and I want to play. To do so, I will first have to post blinds. Soon the system will check to see if I have done this yet or not, and if I have it will let me play. While it checks and waits for me to decide, everyone else at the table waits as well. The final cut off point is still a minute or two away.
The annoyance is, I already know what I will do but I can't do it until the appointed time, and then I only get 10 or 20 seconds or so to press the button. I want to be able to declare my choice when I join the table, not some time later.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
5:28 PM
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Monday, April 10, 2006
Show Avatars Hide Avatars
There is this wonderful selection on the options menu that is called "Show Avatars". This gives you the ability to show the avatars, or if you prefer to save screen space and not show the avatars.
Unfortunately when the avatars go away, the screen space is not reclaimed. In other words, the feature only controls whether or not you see the pretty colors. Where did this requirement come from? I can't imagine that there is any user who has ever said, you know, what would be really desirable would be if I did not have to look at the attractive avatars people use to personalize their player.
Instead it would be nice if the ability to hide avatars allowed the table to become smaller to give me back more of my screen. I do have a larger screen that most, but the table takes up exactly on half of my screen space. Please let me have my monitor back.
I'm sure the graphics designer thinks his screen is wonderful, and I'm sorry for him. But if you can take the avatars out, then do something useful and make better use of the screen space. Make the table smaller.
Or, here's an idea. Without the avatars you might have room to put in the radio buttons and command buttons and other betting dialog widgets that don't currently fit on the screen. What ever you do, please do something that makes sense.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
5:04 PM
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Sunday, April 09, 2006
Login Annoyance
Logins and passwords are a balance between security and usability. It makes sense to protect a real money account with a password. This is security. For convenience, the Doyle's Room client stores the username and password for you so you do not have to type it. This is usability.
The login annoyance is the fact that even though I have requested the application to save my username and password, I still have to manually login at some point each time I run the software. This just makes no sense.
There is absolutely no added security derived from the manual login. There is no password that needs to be typed. No secret that has to be entered. There is no reason for this feature. No reason at all. The client software should just allow the person to play the game without the "manual" login that requires nothing be typed in.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
2:55 PM
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Saturday, April 08, 2006
Hot Keys Not Working
When I play at Doyle's Room, my hotkeys sometimes do not work.
I'm not sure about this. I have two computers and I note that sometimes the function keys work and sometimes they do not work for betting, folding, calling, etc. I seem to think I only have this problem on my desktop machine. Because it is intermittent, I need to track the problem down. My perception is that on single table tournaments (STT) the function keys work, but on multi table tournaments (MTT) the function keys do not work.
Update: I'm playing a $0.10 NL 9 Seat - Holdem NL STT and my hotkeys are not working, though they are working in other applications at this moment. So it appears to be an intermittent problem that is not reproducible.
Cause of Problem:
I've finally figured out what causes this. It is those annoying popup screens that Doyle's Room continually generates. Specifically, this screen causes it.
This will be buried several windows below the table I am playing at and while it does not appear to have focus, it will capture all keystrokes. I suspect the other popup windows cause this as well, but I have only confirmed this one.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
1:05 PM
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Friday, April 07, 2006
Hand Winner Annoyance
When Playing Doyle's Room, the chat window, strangely called "Options" in the title bar, often confuses me. More accurately, it irritates me. For instance, I just lost the last hand that I had bet heavily on. I had three Jacks. I missed the cards the other player had, but the chat window tells me
[other player] wins 4,060 with 3 of a Kind: Jacks
But I had jacks. Why didn't I win? I had a jack in my hand and two on the board. I had three jacks. And I didn't see a jack in his hand when he turned over his card. If the software is working correctly, I can only assume his kicker was higher than mine. It would be nice if the game would tell me what was actually going on rather than a confusing irritating message like it does.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
11:24 AM
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Thursday, April 06, 2006
Buddy List Annoyance
At Doyle's Room, the Buddy List is a small window. A very small window. I have a very large screen. But the window is not sizeable. I've only added a few players to my buddy list, but I intend to put dozens, even hundreds in there if I can. It is a pity that the designers of the software choose to not allow me to see the players on my buddy list.
Which is odd, because the default is to allow a window to be sizeable. You actually have to turn this feature off. This represents control issues comparable to a DOS programmer who just doesn't get Windows.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
10:21 AM
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Wednesday, April 05, 2006
Losing Focus While Betting Annoyance
When playing in Doyle's Room I like using the shortcut keys. No Mouse. The concept is a simple one. I press the function keys to perform my bets. This is a feature of the client software.
F1 - Check/Fold or Fold (it morphs)
F2 - Check
F3 - Bet
F4 - Call
The default is mouse only, but you can enable hotkeys in the options menu.
The problem comes in that if you do not have window focus in the client, then you cannot use your keyboard to control the game. Annoyingly, the client software continually pops up dialog boxes (look alikes, they are not actual Windows common dialog boxes) giving you all sort of very important you must know information. I've seen this happen as often as eight times in the same hand.
Sometimes it is actually relevant, such as informing me that a tournament I'm registered in starts in five minutes. Well, to be honest, it doesn't actually let me know I am registered, it just pops up the message. So I get the notice on a lot of tournaments I am not registered for as well. In fact I seem to get the notice on tournaments that I am not registered for and are full, so I could not register if I wanted to. But after all, why play when I can watch a tournament I'm not in?
The point is my hotkeys no longer work and a significant portion of the table is obscured by these idiot messages. Several items I've come close to losing my turn because the client software won't let me access the game.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
12:27 PM
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Tuesday, April 04, 2006
Tournament Reminders
As I peruse the list of tables in the multiple table tournaments at Doyle's Room, I find that I want a feature that does not exist. (Whoops! The list is gone. It just minimized itself so it can hide from me - that is really irritating.)
There is already a "My Tourneys" feature that will list the tournaments I have registered for. What I would like to see is a list of the tournaments I have an interest in, but have not yet chosen to register for. I'd like a "watch list" of tournaments.
For instance, there may be a tournament I have an interest in that starts in three hours. But I don't know if I will stay up that late, or maybe I might be about to go out to dinner and don't know if I will be back or not. On any given day I can find several of these potential tournaments, but I don't want to register for them unless I know I actually will be able to play.
I may find a tournament I like when I am online at 7:00am, but I'm not going to remember it at 10PM. I'm wasting a lot of time looking for tournaments that are the type I like. And I look for the same tournament again and again. I honestly have never tried it, but I assume if I register for it in the morning, then can't make it they don't give the money back to my account.
I'd like a watch list I can add tournaments to, then decide later if I want to play in them or not.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
10:58 PM
0
comments
Monday, April 03, 2006
Sit Out Next Hand Annoyance
In Doyle's Room ring games, when you run out of chips the client software marks a checkbox labeled "Sit Out Next Time". Presumably both the software and the player know that if you have no chips then you cannot play. It is annoying to me in that even once I go to the cashier for more chips, the sit out next time checkbox is still checked. So what normally happens is that I miss the first game because I have no chips, then I miss the second game because the system has checked the box for me and I have not remembered to uncheck it.
I'm not sure I understand the reasoning for not letting you play in the first place, The system does not allow you to ask for more chips after you lose everything, but before the next game starts. A trick around this is to, just before you go all in, hit the more chips button and get what you can. Of course, this only works if you are betting less that the maximum amount the cashier will give you. For me on 5/10 hold'em ring games that is 750 chips.
Since I tend to win and very seldom lose all my chips, this only happens to me once every few days. But when it does, it is very annoying. And to note: in tournaments, the "Sit Out Next Hand" is called "Away from Table". Same functionality within the game, but a differrent name depending on which game you are playing.
Posted by
Big Jim Slade
at
2:57 AM
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