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  #1  
Old 12-03-2005, 08:37 PM
jdock99 jdock99 is offline
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Default Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

I played a lot of 5/10 SH, did very well. Then I moved up to 10/20 SH for about 35,000 hands. I have been beating the game, but at a much lower rate so that it definitely is a pay decrease. I have been experimenting at 15-30 full and SH and have been running pretty well (over a short # of hands) and am thinking of just givng up on 10-20 SH altogether. I think maybe the dynamics of the 10-20 game do not fit my playing style well.

Have any of u ever just skipped a level because, for whatever reason, ur results werent up to par, and then done fine at the next level. Just wondering.
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  #2  
Old 12-03-2005, 09:06 PM
tongni tongni is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

Don't skip 10/20, whatever you do. Other limits are alright to skip, I went from 10/20 to 20/40, but 10/20 6m is probably the most important limit for a developing player to beat, especially if you ever plan on playing anything above 30/60, but even if you don't you still should.

[ QUOTE ]
I have been experimenting at 15-30 full and SH and have been running pretty well (over a short # of hands)

[/ QUOTE ]

Variance.

[ QUOTE ]
Then I moved up to 10/20 SH for about 35,000 hands. I have been beating the game, but at a much lower rate so that it definitely is a pay decrease.

[/ QUOTE ]

Reality.
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  #3  
Old 12-03-2005, 09:34 PM
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

Most learning is empyrical. Unless you're a natural born poker genius I don't see any reason for a person to want to do this other than good old fasioned sloth.
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  #4  
Old 12-04-2005, 01:38 AM
jdock99 jdock99 is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

Actually, there is another very good reason, $$.

As it stands right now for me my comparative $$/hr at various stakes are 15/30 (10,000 hands) > 5/10 (100,000+ hands > 10/20 (35,000 hands), which leads to the conclusion that maybe I would be better served to move past 10/20 w/o establishing a strong, winrate there and move to 15/30.
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  #5  
Old 12-04-2005, 01:49 AM
DeezNutz3 DeezNutz3 is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

[ QUOTE ]
I played a lot of 5/10 SH, did very well. Then I moved up to 10/20 SH for about 35,000 hands. I have been beating the game, but at a much lower rate so that it definitely is a pay decrease. I have been experimenting at 15-30 full and SH and have been running pretty well (over a short # of hands) and am thinking of just givng up on 10-20 SH altogether. I think maybe the dynamics of the 10-20 game do not fit my playing style well.

Have any of u ever just skipped a level because, for whatever reason, ur results werent up to par, and then done fine at the next level. Just wondering.

[/ QUOTE ]

I made the move a while ago when the games were much different but i did very well at 5/10 6 max starting 2 years ago and moved to 15/30 fulls which were excellent with out playing very many hands at 10/20 6 max. I think that as it stands now I would rather go through the 10/20 games as going from 5/10 to 15/30 can be tough mentally to handle for just one example.

Good Luck.
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  #6  
Old 12-04-2005, 03:14 AM
Subfallen Subfallen is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

[ QUOTE ]
Actually, there is another very good reason, $$.

As it stands right now for me my comparative $$/hr at various stakes are 15/30 (10,000 hands) > 5/10 (100,000+ hands > 10/20 (35,000 hands), which leads to the conclusion that maybe I would be better served to move past 10/20 w/o establishing a strong, winrate there and move to 15/30.

[/ QUOTE ]

Do you or do you not understand that 10k hands is meaningless? I play 10k hands in 3 days.
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  #7  
Old 12-04-2005, 03:22 AM
ggbman ggbman is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

i think kurosh went from 10-20 to 150-300
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  #8  
Old 12-04-2005, 03:28 AM
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

[ QUOTE ]
Actually, there is another very good reason, $$.

As it stands right now for me my comparative $$/hr at various stakes are 15/30 (10,000 hands) > 5/10 (100,000+ hands > 10/20 (35,000 hands), which leads to the conclusion that maybe I would be better served to move past 10/20 w/o establishing a strong, winrate there and move to 15/30.

[/ QUOTE ]

Notice the words in bold.

Which of the following does not belong?:

10,000 hands
35,000 hands
conclusion
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  #9  
Old 12-04-2005, 03:59 AM
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

[ QUOTE ]
i think kurosh went from 10-20 to 150-300

[/ QUOTE ]

heh
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  #10  
Old 12-04-2005, 04:08 AM
jdock99 jdock99 is offline
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Default Re: Anyone ever successfully skipped a limit?

You forgot one word:
maybe

Obviously, if I was confident that my win rate was accurate I would have already made the move to 15/30 and not have bothered writing the thread in the first place. Of course I realize this is a small sample size and I theoretically could actually be a big winner at 10-20 and a loser at 5-10 and 15-30.

That being said, I do not play 10,000 hands every 3 days, as poker is not my profession or even high on my list of preferrential hobbies. And so, I might have to make decisions about my play, such as when to move up or down in limits, w/o having 100% accurate statistical evidence to support those decisions.

The whole point of the thread was to ask other's opinions about 'skipping' a limit, specifically 10-20 6 max, and whether or not it worked out for them, NOT to ask if I had a statistically high enough sample size for my win rates to be 100% accurate. For those of you that realized this and responded constructively "Thank you very much."
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