Perfect Home Game | Cash or Tournament?

House Rules

To get the perfect home game running smoothly, you have to start with the basics

Stuart Campbell shows you how to make friends and (not) alienate people at your next home game

If you’ve ever watched a tournament director setting up the tables and chips and shouting out the new blind levels when the timer beeps, or if you’ve already had a few informal games with mates, you might have the false impression that running a proper poker game is incredibly easy.

Well, it’s not – it’s actually only pretty easy. Nevertheless, there is a right and a wrong way to do it, so over the next six months we’re going to give you a crash course in how to run successful tournaments and cash games, from the simplest kitchen-table affair right up to the point where you’ll be able to handle the management and administration of an entire league.

You’ll also learn what bits of poker equipment will give you the ultimate home game experience without breaking the bank, and some of the pitfalls to avoid so that your friendly evening of cards doesn’t culminate in a squadron of police cars at your front door and a hefty glazier’s bill.

Getting started

Right, let’s start off with the basics. All you really need for a game of poker is a deck of cards and something to bet with, but your guests won’t want to sit on the carpet, so make sure you’ve got a nice sturdy table and enough chairs to go round. A lot of home games fail even at this stage, because poker is best played with seven to ten players to a table and most dining rooms only come with four or six chairs, meaning it can be surprisingly hard just to get everyone sensibly seated. (And no, it’s not acceptable for some poor sap to be perched on a footstool or armchair two feet lower than everyone else with the cards flying straight into their eyes). So make sure you’ve got a proper seat for everyone, even if it means asking some people to bring their own chairs.

Next, you’ll need some chips. If you haven’t yet bought a proper set there are plenty of alternatives you can use. If you’re going to play a cash game you can play with real money instead of some form of chips, but it’s a bit tacky and requires someone to go to the bank in advance for a hefty bag of change. On the other hand, if you use Smarties or other confectionary it may be hard to avoid eating your stack.

To be honest, we’d recommend you start as you mean to go on and invest in a half-decent set. It really does make for a better game, and if you’re really hard up you can pick up a plastic set from Argos for no more than a fiver. Check back next month for a full buyer’s guide.    

Side action

If you opt for a tournament format (sit-and-go) you should always remember to provide some entertainment for players who get knocked out. Obvious examples are a games console or some DVDs to watch, but those are noisy and can end up being distracting for the players still left in the game, so a bunch of quality magazines – such as this one you’re reading now – is probably the best idea for occupying bust-outs quietly. Another option is to keep them involved by getting them to act as dealer, but obviously that only works for the first person out.

So that’s the Home Poker For Dummies stuff sorted. These simple steps should give you a workable game with no major disasters, and in the next part of this series we’ll start getting into an altogether more professional sort of set-up. See you then!

Stuart Campbell is assistant organiser of the Bristol & South West Poker Meetup Group, which runs small tournaments and cash games at venues across the region

Bookmark this post with:

0 Comment

Be the first to comment on this article

You need to register to post comments. Existing members can log in below to comment, otherwise click here to join.



[ GET RSS ]

 
Advertisement

Cash or Tournament?

The first decision you’re going to have to make is whether to play a tournament or cash game. The main advantage of a tournament is that it limits the maximum amount of money anyone can lose, and is therefore good for protecting friendships, while the main factor in favour of a ring game is that you don’t have a situation where someone busts out in the first five minutes and has to spend the rest of the night twiddling their thumbs and/or getting bored, drunk and thoroughly disruptive.

A good compromise is a freezeout tourney with a single rebuy or top-up that costs half the original buy-in and gets you half the original starting stack if you bust out or fall below a certain level (say half or a quarter of what you started with) at any time in the first 90 minutes. That puts a pretty modest ceiling on anyone’s losses, but gives everyone a second chance in the event of getting too excited early on and donking off all or most of their chips. Making the rebuy only half of the starting stack encourages more careful play in future.

Know your limits

Even if this is your first stab at a home game and some of your players are new to poker, it’s still worth jumping in at the deep end and playing no-limit Hold’em. Why? Well, although a no-limit betting structure may seem a bit daunting, the other options aren’t great. Limit Hold’em is pretty outdated these days, not to mention dull and impossible to win at if you get dealt rotten cards, while pot-limit can become confusing if you’re constantly trying to work out the size of the pot and what you can bet. And while you might end up with some early casualties at first in no-limit, as players just move all-in and fail to realise the true value of their hands, at least players will quickly learn about bet sizing and protecting their stack.

Pot-limit might be a good idea if you’re playing a cash game and novices want to restrict their losses, but our advice is to get stuck into no-limit early on so players become accustomed to the format, which is, let’s face it, by far and away the most popular game around.

Building a structure

The tournament structure isn’t quite as important in home games as it is at ‘outside’ locations, because obviously you don’t have a rigid closing time to adhere to. But realistically you don’t want to be going until 7am, so if you’re playing a sit-and-go you should structure the blind levels so as to be done at a reasonable hour. As a rough rule of thumb, you can expect a game to end when the big blind is about one level below the starting stack – so if you start with 8,000 chips you’ll probably get a winner around the time the blinds get to 3,000/6,000.

Build your structure with that in mind, and keep the progression of levels reasonably steady so there’s a good balance between stagnation and a crapshoot. About 20-25 minutes per level is a good ballpark.

In a ring game you should start the evening with a finishing time that everyone is aware of and then cash out when you reach it. But make sure you stick to it, and don’t let anyone have ‘just another couple of hands’ to recoup their losses, as that can end very badly.


SPONSORED LINKS