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  #1  
Old 12-04-04, 11:39 PM
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Default When does BB/hr become a good measure?

Due to the huge swings that I always see in NL, when does the BB/hr measure become a good measure of how well you're doing? 1000 hands? 10000 hands? 100000 hands?

I find that there is so much variance that it's hard to use this as a measure. 1 hand can make the difference between 3 BB/hr and -3 BB/hr.
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  #2  
Old 12-04-04, 11:44 PM
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I would say at least 10,000 hands... but obviousl 50k or 100k would be a lot better measure.
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  #3  
Old 12-04-04, 11:55 PM
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I think that the answer is never.
One stat alone is very dangerous... be careful.
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  #4  
Old 12-05-04, 01:21 AM
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I have always heard of BB/hour in terms of limit play. Grinding it out over a long period of time at the limit tables 10K+ hands would give a pretty good idea of your results.

The swings in NL seem like it would make this number irrelevent. Being a consistant winner over time is really the only thing that matters in NL, no? (and not going broke ) You could calculate it, but I don't see where it would tell you all that much for NL, IMO.

I would be interested to hear why others might think it is useful, though.
  #5  
Old 12-05-04, 03:40 AM
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I agree 10k is min... Still kinda low tho.

Believe it or not, limit has bigger swings than NL. I mean sure .25/.5 NL has larger swings than .25/.5 limit, but when you compare dollar winrate to dollar swings, the dollar amount swings in NL are much smaller than limit. I haven't really tried explaining this to anyone before, so forgive me if it's poorly worded and makes little sense .

Cheers,

Gutzz

PS. I like BB/100 more than BB/hour.
  #6  
Old 12-05-04, 10:17 AM
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I'd say 50,000 hands minimum. 10,000 is kind of small, especially if you're relatively new to the game, actively reading poker books and absorbing/employing new strategies, playing on sites where the player base changes significantly due to promotions, etc.

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Old 12-05-04, 02:47 PM
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Default Bigger Swings in NL

When you sit down to a Cash game playing NL you had better make sure you come with a good bankroll !! I'm not talking Tournaments now, where you ppay a small entry and vie for a Big Payout. The analogy of Micro limit Hold'em games pales in comparison.

I suggest a little reading will go a long way. Dollar winrates don't mean much when a maniac goes all-in and u call him with AA and he flops 2 pair. And You called with 10000 chips.
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Old 12-05-04, 09:05 PM
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Default Read this from Bad Blood

You playing becomes statistically valid at 10,000 hands. The more hands the better, but by the time you have played 10,000 you have enough hands to make a statistical trend. I know I am saying this poorly, but anyway. I read an article once about AI's for Poker playing and read the stat number there.
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