Cash Game Best ways to get people to play limit? Also, favorite limit games? (1 Viewer)

HolySchist848

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Hey there, I run a weekly limit game with some college buddies of mine, and I wanted to hear some thoughts on how to get more people warmed up to limit poker variants. On that note, what are some of your favorite limit games (stud variants, circus games, etc.)? I’d love to hear about other people’s experiences, as I’m a bit new to running a limit game.

Thanks
Zach
 
I used to play limit single-table tournaments on Pokerroom.com almost 20 years ago or so. They were an absolute blast.
The tournaments had blind schedules just like no-limit, but the game played quite different. The beginning of the tournament was loose like a regular limit cash game, more players seeing flops, etc. The middle game played more like an early NL tournament, and when its down to 2 or 3 players, the blinds are high enough that it plays similar to a NL end game. You can make some mistakes along the way and still be in it, which makes for a fun evening.
 
Booze. Lots of booze.


All kidding aside, most pure NL players, you are never going to convince them of the subtleties of playing limit. If you don't have players who are open to playing a mix of games and betting structures (NL, PL, limit, spread limit) then it won't work.
 
Booze. Lots of booze.


All kidding aside, most pure NL players, you are never going to convince them of the subtleties of playing limit. If you don't have players who are open to playing a mix of games and betting structures (NL, PL, limit, spread limit) then it won't work.
[retracting my laughing reaction to this... Well, not the booze part. That's still funny]


I agree with the addendum here. Most players "grew up" with NL holdem with the ability to wield the giant stack and all-in hammer to bully into or through a hand. That's a skill set that has it's place, especially in that type of game. As a result, being through the NL games they (we) have played and have been taught, it's a mindset that's difficult to "break".

I was in a situation where the local gaming control board didn't allow NL cash games for many years. I cut my teeth playing live at one of the local tribal casinos playing 3/6 limit with a kill and pretty quickly realized it was a game of patience and somewhat surgical precision when and how to bet and cap the betting in a limit game vs. the nuclear attack of a an all-in bet in no-limit.

It's nowhere near as exciting as pulling of a bluff for stacks against an opponent in an single hand, but the satisfaction of carefully carving two big bets out of an opponent when you know they really should have folded post-flop is oddly pleasing in my mind.

It's not life changing money, and it's far from a "a made for TV hand" but that is fun poker for me.


For the majority of folks, that's not the game they want to play. They want the high adrenaline hands for the "rush", and no other poker is satisfying to them.

Unfortunately, it's extremely difficult to "get people to play limit". Most can't be turned to the different mindset it is to play versus NL. I've tried with my group several times and despite having sets that can accommodate a reasonable limit game, I just can't get my group to play the game that way.

You can try. You can introduce it many different ways. At some level, a player group just won't bend, not matter how hard you as a host tries.



Not trying to be Debbie Downer here, but just some real-life experience from a limit lover who has tried to turn his player pool into limit players. On occasion it can work, but reallize at some level you are swimming against the current. Most players want to play a game like they see on TV and the game they are watching isn't limit. :rolleyes:




(A slighty more realistic "bridge"... see how your group manages with pot-limit. I see it like a halfway point betwen the two. It's not limit per-se, but is also not no-limit. If they take to PL without too much complaining, you might be able to introduce a periodic limit night into your mix. I haven't even been able to convince my group to play pot-limit and can't get them to play anything but hold'em, so I might be a bad example with a group that can't be turned no matter what....)
 
Just play a game like 7 card stud and its many variants.

“It’s played limit, idk why”

Seems better than convincing NLHE players to play LHE.

Good luck have fun!
 
Just play a game like 7 card stud and its many variants.

“It’s played limit, idk why”

Seems better than convincing NLHE players to play LHE.

Good luck have fun!
I've always wondered if stud was ever played NL. I bet the OP's friends would try to insist on it.
 
Get a kick ass Limit Chip set like this one @Run 'Em broke out to get his crew to go limit
Screenshot_20250222_053515_Messages.jpg

Screenshot_20250222_053440_Photos.jpg
 
7 card stud 8 is my favorite along with Omaha-8.

We play Dealer's Choice and mix a few limit games in with a few NL games. Breaks it up nicely.
 
I love limit and have had success with it in the past with my friends that are NOT poker players or big gamblers. Look for board/table top/thinking players.

As others have mentioned, try introducing mixed games, and use the "it's a limit game/if it was played no limit people would lose too much money and the game would end" excuse.

Also, make sure the stakes are set appropriately. For example if your no limit Holdem stakes are .25/.50:

- .25/.25 for Pot Limit Omaha. Lower because this game plays bigger than NLH, and also people new to Omaha will make mistakes.

- 2/4 for fixed limit games. 8x the no limit BB = fixed limit big bet is a common standard we use to ensure fixed and no limit pot sizes are comparable. You can also lower this to 4x or 6x at first to allow players to adjust without losing as much.

My favorite fixed limit game is Stud, and I'll always call Chicago. Razz is also fun. I haven't played eight or better yet but I'm gonna really enjoy that one.
 
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I've always wondered if stud was ever played NL. I bet the OP's friends would try to insist on it.
Stud is played NL for sure, and we have a blast. It can be dangerous though! Its a mixture of people who still play it like its limit and others who can leverage the swings in hand strength.


To OP, for us it was a slightly higher buy-in and people realizing their stack wasn't at risk every hand. Gave us more room to try other games and just enjoy them, see more showdowns. We love Chicago (7-card stud, highest spade down card gets half the pot), 5 card (sometimes double) draw, drawmaha, and whatever else we call. I treat my NLHE nights as more serious and limit nights as dealer's choice play whatever, and my players have adjusted well.

For us, I'm straddling the line between players who don't want to play for more than $10 and others who are fine with a few $50 rebuys. Limit is fine because they can buy in for whatever they want and just play for 50c/$1 bets with a 25c ante. Most buyins were $25 for a full rack of quarters.

As an added bonus, I bought a separate set for limit so that's another excuse I can use. "Hey I'm hosting and want to use this set, yes I purchased 1000+ quarters, just play with me damnit."
 
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I run / play in a weekly spread limit game. We ended up with a limit game because too many of the core regulars were getting slaughtered in the no limit version of the game.

This is no small thing. The weakest person playing weekly was dropping several hundred a session thus punting $10,000+ a year. And this was in a $0.25/$0.50 game. The game was becoming unstable as players started mulling dropping out or limiting their attendance. Plus the losers weren't having fun. Limit formats means everyone goes home a winner sometimes.

For years we played hold'em, O8 and super hold'em high low in rotation. Now we play a full three ring circus game and never play hold'em - dealers choice switching games every orbit.

The game has been running something like 30 years. I have hosted / played in this game for 25 years. Old age is coming for the game. I doubt we make it five more years. New blood wants to play NL hold'em. -=- DrStrange
 
Incidentally the way I got in to Limit Holdem is that 3/6 limit was the only game offered by my local casino. They did 2-40 spread limit once a month, but true No Limit is illegal in Washington. Even though cardrooms here now offer "No Limit," what it really is is "Spread Limit" with a $400 max.
 

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