EIGHT IS THE NAME OF THE GAME
9 October 2009
Mixing it up on poker diversity
The popularity of the H.O.R.S.E multi-poker variant at
major live tournaments illustrates well the demand for
the more diverse and challenging concept of switching to
other genres of the game during a competition, and
online gambling sites have been quick to respond with
their own versions, and some innovative alternatives to
boot.
Introduced around a year ago and perhaps
the most high profile of these alternatives is the
PokerStars 8-Game, which features eight different poker
variants, including 2-7 Triple Draw, Limit Hold'em,
Omaha 8, Razz, Seven Card Stud, Stud 8, No-Limit Hold'em
and Pot Limit Omaha.
PokerStars offers cash games
which have attracted up to 5 000 players a week, and the
company has revealed that it is currently dealing around
150 000 hands of the 8-Game variety to this growing
player niche. The interest has been extended by offering
the 8-Game concept at major events like this week's EPT
London and the interest of major international names in
the game like former WSOP champ Joe Hachem and David
Williams.
After winning this year's GBP 2 000
buy-in European 8-Game Championships this week Hachem
commented that he believes many players have moved to
8-Game from H.O.R.S.E. because of the addition of
No-Limit Hold'em and Pot-Limit Omaha to the mixed
limit-game format.
"I think people have switched
to 8-Game from H.O.R.S.E because they don't want to just
play Limit games anymore," the former champ said. "The
average punter who watches poker on TV is still going to
be more attracted to No-Limit Hold'em.
"8-Game
is not really all-in poker. Although it might be in the
big bet games, it's not in the Limit games. I think
people want that action, but I also think the variety of
8-Game has definitely got people interested and it will
keep them there."
Williams, who recently won the
8-Game component in the World Championships of Online
Poker, gave another explanation for the genre's
popularity: "I think it's cool because everybody feels
that nobody is good at all the games," he says. "That's
probably true. Although it's also that a lot of the
players that think they're good at all the games might
not be as good as they think.
"You find a lot of
players who are not as good at the Limit games as they
are at No-Limit Hold'em or Pot-Limit Omaha and that
creates an interesting element where some games you are
a favourite and some maybe not."
Williams feels
that 8-Game success depends largely on identifying
exactly where your opponents' strengths and weaknesses
lie, not street to street, but game to game.
In
cash games, the 8-Game format usually involves switching
gamestyles every six hands, whilst in tournaments the
change is effected by level.
More on the
PokerStars 8-Game can be found here:
http://www.pokerstars.com/poker/games/8-game/
Perhaps motivated by the success of the 8-Game online
concept, PokerStars' main rival - Full Tilt Poker.com -
has more recently developed a similar product in its
addition of Full Tilt Poker 7-Game to its range of mixed
poker games.
This combines Fixed Limit Holdem,
Limit Stud Hi-Lo, Limit Razz, Limit Omaha Hi-Lo, Limit
Stud Hi, No-Limit Holdem and Pot-Limit Omaha, and can be
accessed through the Mixed Games lobby on the popular
website, although the composition is widely described on
many independent sites like
http://www.genregames.com/rules-of-7-game-poker-mix.
Full Tilt offers choices of table sizes,with 2, 6
and 8 player games available at stakes starting at 10c /
20c and going all the way to $2000 / $4000 – the
majority of the action being at $2 / $4 and below. 10
hands of each game are played in rotation, rather than
the 6 hands for the 8-game mix at Pokerstars.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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