What is Rake or Rakeback in Poker

May 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

What is rake?

Rake is the money taken out of the pot by the house. Depending on the limit it can be from $.05-$3.00.

What is rakeback or rake back?

Rakeback is a percent of the rake paid back to you for playing at a poker site. Serious players earn thousands of dollars a month just in rakeback. When you sign-up for a rakeback deal via RRR your rakeback money is usually paid automatically by the poker room directly to your poker account. However, sometimes your rakeback money will be paid to your Neteller account.

What is a rakeback affiliate?

A rakeback affiliate such as RRR is a site that helps promote online poker rooms. In return we are paid a percent of the rake collected from poker players that sign up via us. Each month we pass on the vast majority of our cut from poker rooms to our players.

I am already signed up at a room, can I get rake back there?

No. You can, however, on some networks switch skins and play on the same network.

What is a skin?

A skin is a group of poker rooms that share are on the same poker network. For example Cryptologic skins would include InterPoker and Sun Poker and a handful other rooms. Players at all of these rooms play in the same games. Most networks will allow you to sign up under all skins regardless of the number of rooms on the network you are already signed up for.

How does the poker room come up with my rake amount?

The rooms use a formula called Monthly Gross Revenue (MGR) a ka net rake. This is the amount from which your rakeback is calculated, i.e. if your rakeback percentage is 30 and your MGR is $1,000 you would get $300 in rakeback.

To calculate your MGR some rooms subtract any bonuses earned during the month, while others don’t. The same goes for whether or not tournament fees are included in MGR. Rooms also have different methods for calculating your share of the actual rake. Some poker rooms use what is called contributed rake where you must participate in the pot to have rake credited. Others use the dealt method where you are credited with rake in every hand where you’re dealt cards.Read more about how a certain poker room calculates rake by visiting its page here on RRR.

Will I get a sign-up bonus when I sign up for a rakeback deal?

In most cases yes. Read more about a certain poker room’s sign-up bonus by visiting its page here on RRR. Please note that in some cases this bonus will be subtracted from your net rake.

Can my spouse, parent, brother, sister, roommate or anyone else that shares my computer have an account at the same poker room as me?

Usually, but they will need to get their own funding source for their account. You usually can not share Neteller or Firepay accounts with them. You may however transfer them money at most poker rooms. Signing up underage people, pets, appliances, lawn gnomes or some other figment of your imagination just to get a rakeback deal is fraud. You risk the poker room asking for ID and then having your account frozen and funds confiscated. It will also be hard to fund this account as it is not possible to get Neteller accounts for these fantasies.

I am looking for rake back at Party Poker or Poker Stars, why can’t I find one?

These two rooms do not currently support rakeback. Other poker rooms that do not offer rakeback include Pacific Poker and Paradise Poker. Should any of this change we will quick to provide you with rakeback deals from these poker rooms.

Texas Holdem - Analyzing the Flop

May 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Most of your important decisions in Texas Holdem poker take place on the flop. That’s why the ability to analyze the flop is essential for your long term results in Texas holdem poker.

You will not get anywhere in Texas holdem if you aren’t able to read the flop properly. Reading the flop means knowing what hands it makes possible, knowing what your own possibilities are as well as your opponents’. You must also understand how the texture of the flop influences the game, that is, how threatening the flop is - to you as well to your opponents.

There are a number of patterns you need to be looking for on each and every flop. They may show up alone or in combinations. Each of those patterns, or structures, gives rise to a certain type of post flop play, all of which you must learn to master.

Let’s walk through those patterns one at a time.

Possible straights

If there are three cards with two gaps or less between them, someone may have a ready-made straight. For example, if the flop comes 9-8-5, T-9-8, or 3-2-A.

Of course, the chance that someone actually has a made straight depends on what precise cards arte required. Q-J-T makes a lot more straights than 7-5-3, since it’s much more likely that someone who has stayed in to see a flop has A-K, K-9 or 9-8 than 6-4 in the hand. Hands like 6-4 are very often thrown away preflop.

This kind of board is pretty infrequent though, and if it’s you who have the straight, you typically won’t get a lot of action from the opponents, since the straight is so obvious and the pot is usually relatively small at this stage.

Possible flush

If all three cards are of the same suit, someone might have a made flush. Just like with the straights above, this doesn’t happen often, and if you have a flush here you often won’t get paid a lot, unless an opponent has another flush that is lower than yours. Which is really rare.

When you flop a made straight of flush, you may be tempted to slow play it in order to entice a bet from another player rather than scaring everyone off. That might be okay, but don’t overdo it. Your hand is never the absolute nuts, there are always cards that may come on the board that will look really bad for your hand.

For example, if the board pairs, your flush may not be good anymore, or if you have a straight and the board flushes.

Pairs on board

With a pair on the board, a lot of dangerous hands become possible: quads and full houses as well as trips and two pair. Once the board is paired, the value of straights and flushes go down, the value of straight draws and flush draws too.

If you get a lot of action on a paired board, you must be able to lay down for example a flush. At the same time, a paired board is a good bluff opportunity, both for you and your opponent. So don’t fold your flush automatically. Think it through!

Also remember that when a pair is on the board, hands like three of a kind and two pair are much weaker than if the board is un-paired. You may be up against one of those super strong hands just mentioned, or else someone may simply have the same trips with a better kicker.

Straight draws

If two board cards are within two gaps or closer, someone may have flopped a straight draw. This means that if you have a made hand, like two pair or trips, you’ll need to protect your hand. Meaning, you have to bet properly to put any drawing hands to the test.

This doesn’t mean that you should bet twice the pot or even move all in, that may be a bit over-protective. Just make a well sized bet so you don’t give away free cards to the drawing hands. Then, if a card arrives that could have filled someone’s straight, then you need to decide if it’s actually the case or not. It’s not easy to separate made hands from bluffs - but that’s poker.

Flush draws

Flush draws are possible as soon as there are two cards of the same suit at the board. Just as with straight draws, a made hand needs protection through a decent bet.

If you flopped a flush draw yourself, you should be aware that there are usually nine cards in the deck that will make it for you, which means you have odds 4-1 on the next street and 2-1 if you get to see two more cards.

Also realize that if you make a flush on a later street, you’ll often not get paid very much since the flush is pretty obvious. People notice when there are three hearts on the board, and they typically won’t give you much action. Unless they happen to have a strong hand, like a lower flush.

Straights are often much harder to see. Imagine a flop of A-8-4. You bet out with A-K and get one caller. The turn comes a 6. The pot is getting bigger, and you want it. You bet and the opponent re-raises. Would you really put him on 7-5? It’s pretty hard to believe. Also, players often may not even notice that a straight has become possible.

If a player draws to a straight and a flush simultaneously, there may be as much as 15 cards that fill at least one of those hands.

Of course, both potential straights and potential flushes give players opportunities to bluff. If you consider drawing to a flush, check if a straight draw is also possible, in which case you have a second way out if you don’t make your flush: representing the straight.

High cards or low cards

If the pot comes with one, two or three high cards, chances are that someone has made a connection to his or her hand. At the flop, high cards are much more likely than low cards in players’ hands, since people tend to fold hands with low cards preflop.

This kind of flop leads to a lot of action, and you have to be well aware of your chances as well as the dangers involved. Fasten your seat belt!

High cards also present you with some bluff potential, since they look scary to the other guy. Of course, this is a sword that cuts both ways.

On the other hand, if the flop holds low cards only, it’s very possible that it missed all players. If you raised preflop with a high pair, you’re probably still good after a low flop, even if it actually missed you as well. You can play your overpair strongly here.

On the other hand, the fact that it’s hard to lay down premium starting hands against low boards has given rise to a whole new strategy concept - set mining. This consists of taking flops with low pairs and hoping to hit a set. Then the idea is that your opponent who’s playing a strong starting hand will pay you off big time even though he missed the flop, since he can’t get away from his premium hand and the low board looks innocuous.

For set mining to show long time profitability, a few requirements must be in place. The opponent must have a strong hand. For example, a raise in early position from a tight opponent is a good signal of strength. Also, both you and the opponent must have big stacks, so you can win really big when you hit your set - to compensate for all the times when you miss (7 out of 8 times).

Combining the board and your hand

As a last step in the Texas holdem flop analysis, you should compare the board to your own hand. This can led you to some pretty strong conclusions.

For example, if the flop comes Q-J-6 and you have a pair of tens, the risk for straight draws is much decreased, since you hold half the tens need to form a straight. You have straight blockers.

Or if a player raises preflop, you have an ace in your hand and the flop comes A-A-5, it’s suddenly quite unlikely that the opponent has an ace - there’s only one ace left unseen.

Once you have learned to read the board, this kind of combined analysis is the next step  to perfection in texas holdem.

Party Gaming Settles with the US for $105 Million Dollars

May 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Poker website pokeronlinehelp.com is for sale for $9500 US.  In order to avoid prosecution in the United States PartyGaming has made $105 million agreement with the US Attorney’s Office. The company is supposed to pay the settlement over a three year period.

Before the UIGEA was in affect in the United States PartyGaming’s subsidiary Party Poker offered online poker to American players, but after the law was passed the company chose to leave the US market.

PartyGaming has accepted a Statement of Facts that the company offered online gambling services on the US market between 1997 and 2006 and that some transactions conducted by third parties for the company were against the current laws in the US.

By settling for $105 PartyGaming avoids prosecution in the US and can proceed with future endeavors and investments. PartyGaming has also agreed to stay out of the US market under current legislation.

After the news of the settlement became official the PartyGaming stock increased by 15 %.

Bodog Got Their Main Domain Back Bodog.com

May 2, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Bodog.com has been down in more than one and a half year because of a prolonged court process. But as of yesterday it’s linking to the Bodoglife.com domain.

It was in 2007 that the gaming company Bodog lost control over its main domain. Bodog was sued by 1st Technology for stealing a patent. This matter has now been settled in court by Bodog’s current owner Morris Mohawk Gaming Group costing the company $48 million.

The prolonged court process has hurt Bodog badly. After loosing the main domain name Bodog went from one of the 10 ten largest poker rooms in the world to number 15. But now the main domain is once again pointing toward BodogLife. The question is, does Bodog has what it takes to rise once again?

Top 5 Rookie Poker Player Mistakes

March 23, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Playing too Many Hands
It’s important to be selective when playing poker.  the old saying may go, “you can’t win if you don’t play,” but it’s also true that you can’t lose what you don’t put in the pot.  Playing mediocre hands that lose most of the time when up against premium hands will destroy your chip stack.  By playing too many hands, you’re tipping the odds in your opponent’s favor.
Playing Over your Head
If you’re really a beginner, play at a beginner table.  Many rookies think they have the game down cold just because they watch the WPT on TV all the time and they clean up while playing their poker buddies in the basement.  Start out small and if you dominate those levels, move up.  it will save you lots of money if you play below your level instead of over it.
Too much Bluffing
This is another rookie symptom brought on by watching too much poker on TV.  You’re not a poker pro yet, so don’t think you can act like one.  Throwing in the occasional bluff is fine, but don’t fall in love with trying to dupe the table, or the players who know that they’re doing will fleece you.
Playing Distracted
If you’re going to play poker then play poker.  Don’t listen to your favorite tunes while watching TV and catching up on some of that work you missed while slacking off at the office.  If you’re not totally focused on the game, you’ll make that one big mistake that sucks you dry.
Falling in Love with your Hand
Rookies who get monster hands tend to play them out no matter what happens.  When they do pull in a monster hand and it gets beat, that usually means a lot of chips just went to their opponent.  Remember, no matter how good your hand is, it is beatable, so don’t be afraid to fold if you know you’re beat.

Online Poker Tournaments with a 100% Deposit Bonus

March 2, 2009 by admin · 1 Comment 

Wed 11th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Start

Name

Game Type

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

00:15

USARounders Skill Level 6 - Daily 00:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/15M Rounds, With Antes

No Limit Texas Holdem

$20.00

$2.00

0

$0.00

00:20

BigDaddys holdem nl

No Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

0

$0.00

00:30

$3 PL Omaha Hi/Lo - 00:30

Pot Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

3

$9.00

00:40

BigDaddys holdem nl

No Limit Texas Holdem

$1.00

$0.10

0

$0.00

00:45

$5 Heads Up Shootout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$0.50

0

$0.00

01:00

BigDaddys Omaha

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$0.50

0

$0.00

01:00

$2 Shootout Freezeout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$2.00

$0.20

2

$4.00

01:15

$5 Bounty SH Freerzout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.50

1

$3.00

01:40

BigDaddys Holdem NL

No Limit Texas Holdem

$1.00

$0.10

0

$0.00

02:00

BigDaddys Omaha HiLo

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$0.50

0

$0.00

02:15

USARounders - Skill Level 5 - Daily 02:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/10M Rounds, With Antes

No Limit Texas Holdem

$15.00

$1.50

0

$0.00

02:20

BigDaddys Holdem NL

No Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

0

$0.00

02:40

BigDaddys 7 Card Stud

No Limit Texas Holdem

$1.00

$0.10

0

$0.00

05:15

USARounders - Skill Level 4 - Daily 05:15 CST - Deep Stack 5000/8M Rounds, With Antes

No Limit Texas Holdem

$12.00

$1.20

0

$0.00

12:40

$2 NL Holdem Freezeout - 12:40

No Limit Texas Holdem

$2.00

$0.20

0

$0.00

15:20

$3 NL Holdem - 15:20

No Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

0

$0.00

17:45

$1 NL Holdem Turbo - 17:45

No Limit Texas Holdem

$1.00

$0.10

0

$0.00

18:20

$3 PL Omaha - 18:20

Pot Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

0

$0.00

20:00

$5 NL Holdem Short Handed Turbo

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$0.50

0

$0.00

23:40

$5 Turbo Heads Up Shootout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$0.50

0

$0.00

Thu 12th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Start

Name

Game Type

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

21:00

$25 Thursday Night Extravaganza

No Limit Texas Holdem

$25.00

$2.00

0

$100.00

Sun 15th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Start

Name

Game Type

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

13:00

RioPokerPalace $10 Guaranteed Omaha Hilo Freeroll

Pot Limit Texas Holdem

$0.00

$0.00

0

$10.00

Sun 29th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Start

Name

Game Type

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

13:00

Paper Chase $5k NL Holdem Event #1

No Limit Texas Holdem

$0.00

$0.00

0

$0.00

Tue 10th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Start

Name

Game Type

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

23:00

$10 Bounty Freezeout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$5.00

$1.00

23

$115.00

23:20

$3 PL HO Freezeout

Pot Limit Texas Holdem

$3.00

$0.30

24

$72.00

23:50

$3 Bounty Turbo Freezeout

No Limit Texas Holdem

$2.00

$0.30

68

$136.00

Tue 10th Mar 2009 (All Times Eastern)

Finish

Name

Buy In

Entry Fee

Players

Prize Pool

Winner

20:50

$5 NL Holdem Short Handed Turbo

$5.00

$0.50

33

$165.00

BigJ19

20:10

$3 PL Omaha - 18:20

$3.00

$0.30

39

$117.00

BLOtheAFguy

19:17

$1 NL Holdem Turbo - 17:45

$1.00

$0.10

109

$109.00

allycats221

16:57

$3 NL Holdem - 15:20

$3.00

$0.30

42

$126.00

gusbuster5

14:36

$2 NL Holdem Freezeout - 12:40

$2.00

$0.20

24

$48.00

mrscarroll21

03:00

$5 Bounty SH Freerzout

$3.00

$0.50

35

$105.00

exbruin

02:26

$2 Shootout Freezeout

$2.00

$0.20

22

$44.00

nyhydro

02:16

$5 Heads Up Shootout

$5.00

$0.50

13

$65.00

ChefBoyrdvegas1

01:50

$3 PL Omaha Hi/Lo - 00:30

$3.00

$0.30

17

$51.00

UseYourBlink

01:37

$3 Bounty Turbo Freezeout

$2.00

$0.30

87

$174.00

timothy0101

01:15

$10 Bounty Freezeout

$5.00

$1.00

52

$260.00

dolphinfan131

01:13

$3 PL HO Freezeout

$3.00

$0.30

26

$78.00

wheresyourdevilatnow

00:20

$5 Turbo Heads Up Shootout

$5.00

$0.50

8

$40.00

DABIGMAC