Winning Online Poker Tip # 3
Accepts Poker Players from USA
Rake and Tokes
Let's take a look at a third winning online poker strategy and use a simple experiment and arithmetic to understand something that most poker players overlook.....
Imagine a full time Texas Holdem poker player in a $10-$20 game. He is dealt a thousand Texas Holdem hands every week. He actually plays only 400 of those hands, wins 50 pots and he wins an average of $1,000 a week. Our imaginary player does well. Divide the number of hands he plays into the average weekly win and you'll get an expectation of just $2.50 per hand played - - peanuts per hand!
Our player is imaginary and there's plenty of bar napkins so you can juggle the figures any way you want, but you'll still come up with peanuts. With this in mind, the rest of this page becomes a little more meaningful.
Rakes
Casinos and poker rooms either rake each pot or charge the players on a time basis. It's part of the poker player's overhead. There are various methods of collecting from the players, but it really boils down to just two ways. If the money is taken from the pot, it's a rake. If the money is collected from the players equally, it's a time charge although it might be called something else.
The casinos and poker rooms provide you a place to play, security, dealers, a fair game, impartial settling of disputes, and promotions to attract players. Any reasonable rake or time charge is worth it.
Tokes
Tokes are an important part of the dealers' income and part of the poker player's overhead. You want the dealers to make their money, but keep your toking affordable.
If you play Texas Holdem poker full time (about 40 hours a week) in a casino or card room, you will be dealt about a thousand hands every week. If you play every hand at a full ten player game, you probably win about a hundred pots a week. If you play tight, you might win about fifty pots a week, maybe less. Multiply your normal toke times the estimated number of pots you win to get an idea of how much money you are toking the dealers each week. Multiply the maximum rake times the approximate number of pots you win to estimate how much you are paying the casino each week. Don't overlook additional rakes for bad beat jackpots. If you play in a casino that charges time, you should already know how much you are paying the casino. This is just an estimate, of course, but it does give you an approximation of your rake and toke overhead.
If you play poker online, you won't be expected to toke the dealing bot, however you might be paying transaction fees. You'll have to investigate your method of payment and withdrawal to learn how to avoid or at least minimize the transaction fees when you play at a poker website.
Your cost to play becomes important when compared to your average win on a weekly or annual basis. Casino rake is usually less significant in higher limit Texas Holdem games, but it still represents a substantial percentage of your poker income and you should be aware of it. You'll have to win as much as it costs you to play just to break even. You'll have to win much more to get a decent edge.
If all else is equal, play in the poker rooms that cost you the least or give you the most. Paying a little more is probably worth it in a casino that attracts more players and offers more games you like. Your play records should tell you which is best. Let's proceed to winning online poker tip #4.
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