Two Plus Two Older Archives  

Go Back   Two Plus Two Older Archives > Limit Texas Hold'em > Micro-Limits
FAQ Community Calendar Today's Posts Search

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 11-05-2005, 03:45 PM
gulebjorn gulebjorn is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 0
Default NL -> Limit $100 going up the stakes

Hey everyone, this is my first post in this forum. I've always spent my time on 2+2 in SSPL&NLHE, so I don't know if this post is stupid/redundant/inappropriate. If so, just let it die.

I've always been a NL player, currently at $100NL games. I've played maybe 5 hours of fixed limit hold'em in my life. I've been thinking for a while to take up some fixed limit playing, and today I finally did. I took $100 and put it into pokerroom. I will use this account for fixed limit cash games only.

The plan is to move up in limits as fast as I can. I will use a 100xPTBB bankroll, and move up whenever I have 100 big bets for the next level. When I drop below this, I'll move down again.

I started out 3-tabling $0.50-$1 HE today. I played for 1.5 hrs and ended up $36. When I reach $200, I will move up to $1-$2 FL HE.

I don't know if you have a lot of NL -> Limit threads in here. I'll try to comment on the biggest differences I see between the games.

My thought for today was:

In a NL game, if a lot of people fold before it's your turn, you can lower your starting hand requirements considerably. In a limit game, it almost seems as if you want to lower your starting hand requirements if there are a lot of people in the pot, so you can gamble and try to flop big. Any thoughts on that?

And a question: is there a rule of thumb of how to play small pairs preflop? In a NL game, I almost never fold em PF.

Anyway, I wonder how this is gonna turn out. Hope it will be interesting.

All comments and advice is appreciated.
Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 11-05-2005, 04:25 PM
DavidC DavidC is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 292
Default Re: NL -> Limit $100 going up the stakes

[ QUOTE ]
The plan is to move up in limits as fast as I can. I will use a 100xPTBB bankroll, and move up whenever I have 100 big bets for the next level. When I drop below this, I'll move down again.


[/ QUOTE ]

This practice will lead you to increased ROR, but since it's only $100, don't sweat it. It should be fun. For a more permanent roll, 300-500bb is good (this depends on your winrate).

[ QUOTE ]

In a NL game, if a lot of people fold before it's your turn, you can lower your starting hand requirements considerably. In a limit game, it almost seems as if you want to lower your starting hand requirements if there are a lot of people in the pot, so you can gamble and try to flop big. Any thoughts on that?


[/ QUOTE ]

LOL! Here's one: read SSHE? [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]

But you're right. Looking at a hand like 22 in MP2: if it's folded to you, you fold. A hand like 77, though, you might raise if it's folded to you, limp if 2-3 players limp, raise if a weak player limps alone, and fold if one tight player limps early. I'm not sure as I haven't played much in a while.

You do have to be careful that you don't totally open your game to the point where you're playing like 25-30% of hands though... this is probably -EV over the long-term.


[ QUOTE ]

And a question: is there a rule of thumb of how to play small pairs preflop? In a NL game, I almost never fold em PF.


[/ QUOTE ]

Depends on how the game is playing. In a loose game, go ahead and limp in EP. In a tight game, maybe raise? I don't know... that seems pretty ballsy, and you'd better be amazing post-flop.

However, you have to be careful because your implied odds aren't as good post-flop as they would be in NLHE (though the preflop raises are smaller in LHE too, which helps your implied odds).

Part of your consideration with having a set post-flop is that if the board is draw heavy, and they have a draw, then your implied odds aren't a function of what amount of money goes in, but they're a function of what amount of cash goes in, multiplied by your equity in the hand. You may be giving up a lot of equity when you can't make a flush draw fold, for example.

[ QUOTE ]

Anyway, I wonder how this is gonna turn out. Hope it will be interesting.

All comments and advice is appreciated.

[/ QUOTE ]

I assume you're playing full ring, right?

Good luck, bud. Have a good time.

OOC, what's the winrate of a good player in the NLHE $100 game on party?

--Dave.
Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:08 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.