NL Hold Em hasn't hurt the poker scene, it IS the poker scene!
To me, NLHE is to poker as the revolver is to Matthew Quigley in the movie "Quigley Down Under".
I said I didn't have much use for one. Didn't say I didn't know how to use it./ISPOILER]
The easiest way to scare off new players is to have them bust out quickly. I had only played $1/2 NL since 2004-5 and saw how it ruins regular games. Many people, no matter what they say or how skilled they are or how much money they make, do not like losing several hundred dollars in one night. The most ridiculous part of that is how pride will trump reason. My old crew would simply not accept lowering the stakes. They rather just play every other month at $1/2 than every other week at something lower.What kinda games were in your rotation? Any issues teaching noobs different games? That’s my biggest worry, scaring off newer players.
Ha, tell that to Borgata and the other card rooms in AC. When Borgata opened and limit was the only game allowed they quickly out grew their room and built a new one 10 times the size. Now it’s pupetutually 1/3 full unless they have some big tournament in the back. And Borgata is by far the poker Mecca if AC right now. The new Hard Rock didn’t even build a poker room!NL Hold Em hasn't hurt the poker scene, it IS the poker scene!
The easiest way to scare off new players is to have them bust out quickly. I had only played $1/2 NL since 2004-5 and saw how it ruins regular games. Many people, no matter what they say or how skilled they are or how much money they make, do not like losing several hundred dollars in one night. The most ridiculous part of that is how pride will trump reason. My old crew would simply not accept lowering the stakes. They rather just play every other month at $1/2 than every other week at something lower. And Borgata is by far the poker Mecca if AC right now.
I started a $.25/50 game to get my neighbors and my father in laws buddies to play cash. The first of those games had only a $20 max buyin. This is very low but allowed people to manage their personal risk tollerance plus it was what they would pay for small tournament buyins. As they got more comfortable we raised it to $40. We did however take some casualties with that. After I reacquainted with @sir bluffs alot last year we started merging our poker friends. His guys were more experience than my neighbors but willing to play lower stakes and play more often. Right now it’s a pretty good game that we both are hosting. $50 is starting to be the acceptable buyin and is a good 100bb scenerio. I fear pushing past that as I’m sure we would hemorrhage players. I still have my $1/2+ crew that I could play with but actually haven’t in a while. I kind of like our new group.
Ha, tell that to Borgata and the other card rooms in AC. When Borgata opened and limit was the only game allowed they quickly out grew their room and built a new one 10 times the size. Now it’s pupetutually 1/3 full unless they have some big tournament in the back. The new Hard Rock didn’t even build a poker room!
The poker boom should have created a permanent addition poker players nationally. I wouldn’t be surprised if casino poker gets closer to pre boom numbers over the next 10 years. NL is not ideal for regular playing. Most players are too incompetent to handle NL on a regular basis. Plus the amplification of “bad beats” is sometimes enough for solid players to take a break.
Doyle Brunson saying “no limit was the Cadillac of poker” wasn’t the best for the game in the long run ...in my opinion.
Since you have been around so long, you no doubt remember the trend of closing poker rooms just prior to the last 'boom' in poker. In AC, the trend now seems to be closing of the whole casino.I find it coincidental, that since NL hold em took over , many casinos have closed their poker rooms . In Tunica we used to have over a dozen casinos, all of them had poker rooms full of numerous poker games . Now , there are only 2 casinos left, that have a poker room, and they usually only have a few tables running , with just NL hold em.
I understand there may be other factors that are causing poker rooms to be closed down in the casinos, but I feel NL hold em is part of the reason.
Doyle once told a group of us that, "Hope is not a strategy."Doyle Brunson saying “no limit was the Cadillac of poker” wasn’t the best for the game in the long run ...in my opinion.
Since you have been around so long, you no doubt remember the trend of closing poker rooms just prior to the last 'boom' in poker. In AC, the trend now seems to be closing of the whole casino.
AC and to much lesser extent LV, are now having to actually compete in an expanding gambling ecosystem. I would suggest that valuing squeezing every last cent from the customer over the customer's experience has significantly led to the overall decline in gaming as much as in the closing of poker rooms.
I might also suggest that welfare economies are not a good basis of support for industries that rely largely on disposable income.
Doyle once told a group of us that, "Hope is not a strategy."
OP seems to have an axe to grind - some may indulge that rabbit hole but I need to respectfully pass on that discussion.
I could play without a shirt.I for one would love to see more stud games spread in casinos. But it's probably not going to happen anytime soon unless someone makes it sexy. For that, you need TV.
So if you're that casino patron in 2000 looking for a new experience to try, were you really going to sit in that stud game with all those players who seemingly have been doing this for years? Or are you going to just go try your luck at blackjack, craps roulette or video poker... all of which you can dip your toe in and learn at your own pace without risking a lot?
So the introduction and reduction of the intimidation factor has been a good thing to attract millions of new players to the game... which is essential to the ecosystem of any activity. But there's been a cost.
The proliferation of NL Holdem cash games has made virtually every other form of poker appear to be exponentially more intimidating to players who've never been exposed to it. Just grasping the small mechanical difference between Omaha and Holdem is far too complex for the player who's perception of poker is that HE is the standard and all other forms of the game are peripheral. This is not a good thing.
I don't necessarily think casinos prefer to spread one form of poker over another. Their a business providing a service... so they run the game people want to play. Right now, that game for better or worse is NLHE.
I for one would love to see more stud games spread in casinos. But it's probably not going to happen anytime soon unless someone makes it sexy. For that, you need TV.
I could play without a shirt.
Seriously, change doesn't happen with out work. If you want to change the games and culture around where you play, organize like minded players and work with 'the house' to spread the games you want. Organizing a game in a casino setting is done the same way you would in a home setting: find a day and time suitable for your player pool, work to expand the player pool, get the game spread where non-pool players can see it, make it affordable and fun.
These things are not impossible. They don't happen overnight, but if you can get one instance organized, mlre will follow.
I joined a few like minded mix game players for a game about once a month, then it was going every week, now it goes about 4 or 5 times week, at two different limits with interest in another. That group is now about 9 months running and has changed cardrooms 3 times. We even got the house to give us a reduced hourly seat charge over the NL and PL games they spread!
It all started with a talk with management, who posted on their facebook page asking if anyone was interested. Then one player assembled the player list and now contacts players about game times.
But, none of this happened without work. So find like minded players and talk to management about hosting the game you want.
One other thought - have you ever stopped to consider why those other games and betting structures are rarely spread? I mean - NLHE is the prevailing cash game now - but that didn't displace FL games; it replaced them.
There's no logical reason those games couldn't have run concurrently if there'd been enough demand. But that's not what happened. Whether you like it or not, NLHE is preferable to all other forms of poker for it's simplicity if nothing else. The old FL guys are now playing NL because that's where the action is.
I could play without a shirt.
Seriously, change doesn't happen with out work. If you want to change the games and culture around where you play, organize like minded players and work with 'the house' to spread the games you want. Organizing a game in a casino setting is done the same way you would in a home setting: find a day and time suitable for your player pool, work to expand the player pool, get the game spread where non-pool players can see it, make it affordable and fun.
These things are not impossible. They don't happen overnight, but if you can get one instance organized, mlre will follow.
I joined a few like minded mix game players for a game about once a month, then it was going every week, now it goes about 4 or 5 times week, at two different limits with interest in another. That group is now about 9 months running and has changed cardrooms 3 times. We even got the house to give us a reduced hourly seat charge over the NL and PL games they spread!
It all started with a talk with management, who posted on their facebook page asking if anyone was interested. Then one player assembled the player list and now contacts players about game times.
But, none of this happened without work. So find like minded players and talk to management about hosting the game you want.
That's great!Best idea to come from this discussion so far
I did exactly what you described over the last 6 months - just without the casino's help. I now run a semi-regular mixed FL game with a great group of players.
I had an onion on my belt, which was the fashion at the time...Almost 50 posts and no one used this yet.........c'mon people, get it together.....
And I hear ya OP, I hate paying for the "lottery" I've never won in cash games...... (BBJs)
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Right there with you.....Old man yelling ? How about " middle aged man yelling " ? lol
I had an onion on my belt, which was the fashion at the time...
Another interesting thread. The comments from Sklanski and Malmuth are interesting.
https://forumserver.twoplustwo.com/...-no-limit-ultimately-been-good-poker-1549587/
Back in the 90s, the max casino rake was $5 on a $100 pot. I called 12 casinos in Florida and all of them are now raking $5 on a $50 pot and they take $2 out for bad beat hand . This means on a $50 pot, they are taking out $7
Personally, I've already spent enough of my life sharing a table with enmiserated limit stud regs who would rather shart broken glass than tip a waitress, but that's probably just me.
I guess you are going to blame No-Limit for casinos for dumping the 3:2 payout on blackjack too? No Limit charges for increased parking fees in Vegas? Casinos are squeezing every penny, from every angle they can. It's not the fault of No Limit.