SOFTWARE UPDATE FROM FULL TILT POKER
23 October 2009
New formats for tourneys and a reprise
feature for cash game community cards in latest version
The latest software upgrade at Full Tilt Poker.com
includes a new "Run It Twice" feature which should prove
popular, enabling as it does an option where the players
can pre-select a facility that allows them to see up to
five community cards dealt a second time.
The
feature is available on specific Run It Twice tables,
although there are apparently plans to extend it further
once the trialling period has been satisfactorily
completed and usage assessed.
The term "run it
twice" will be familiar to television railbirds from the
cash games broadcast on TV such as High Stakes Poker.
The basics are that when two players are all-in, they
can both agree to lay down the remaining community cards
again - hence the term 'run it twice'. For example, two
players all-in 'running it twice' from the flop would
deal the turn and the river and then a second set of
turn and river cards. Two separate boards are formed,
each one worth 50 percent of the pot. Fans of the
concept say that it creates more excitement, and can
prevent a cautious player from losing his or her entire
stack on coinflip hands.
Full Tilt has also
introduced a new format for tournaments that allows some
of the prize pool to be cashed out by the players. In
this format, half of the player's buy-in goes into the
prize pool, and the other half goes into a specially
designated cashout pool. At any point in the tournament
before the final table, a player can choose to cash out
between 10 and 100 percent of their stack for a
guaranteed payout.
The Cashout option can be
accessed at any point by clicking on a large red button
in the upper left of the table window, which pops up a
second window with information on the player's remaining
chip count and what compensation will be paid.
A
Full Tilt spokesman gave an example of how this might
work, assuming that the player in a $20+$2 tournament
started with 1 500 in chips. Those 1 500 chips are now
worth $10 (half the buy-in), should the player choose to
exit the tournament. But if the player managed to double
up to a 3 000 stack he or she would be looking at
breaking even, insuring against loss while still
enjoying the tournament, albeit with far fewer chips.
The cashout period ends once the tournament reaches
the final table, when all the money remaining in the
Cashout Pool is distributed between the remaining
players in proportion their stack size.
The
software upgrade also introduces 7-Game tournaments.
Mixed games have become increasingly popular over recent
years, as the top pros seek to demonstrate their
abilities over a wide range of poker disciplines. In a
7-game mix, at every round the action switches between
Fixed Limit Hold ‘em, Fixed Limit Stud H/L, Fixed Limit
Razz, Fixed Limit Omaha H/L, Fixed Limit Stud Hi, No
Limit Hold ‘em and Pot Limit Omaha Hi.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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