{"id":1171,"date":"2024-09-06T15:55:34","date_gmt":"2024-09-06T15:55:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/extraniceshirts.org\/?p=1171"},"modified":"2024-10-01T14:44:22","modified_gmt":"2024-10-01T14:44:22","slug":"six-reasons-why-mystery-bounty-tournaments-are-bad-for-poker","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/extraniceshirts.org\/index.php\/2024\/09\/06\/six-reasons-why-mystery-bounty-tournaments-are-bad-for-poker\/","title":{"rendered":"Six Reasons Why Mystery Bounty Tournaments Are Bad For Poker"},"content":{"rendered":"
Mystery bounty poker tournaments are becoming more prevalent, and it\u2019s not difficult to see why. Recreational players seem to love them, and they produce big, exciting moments for social media clicks. Almost all online sites now offer them, and they\u2019re taking up an increasing percentage of the live tournament schedule too. <\/p>\n
However, mystery bounties may not be all they\u2019re cracked up to be. Here are six reasons why we need less, not more, of this sort of thing.<\/p>\n
Progressive knockout tournaments (PKOs) have been popular among operators because they tend to spread the tournament prize pool more thinly between different players. This keeps money circulating and the games going.<\/p>\n
\nIf the top bounty goes to a recreational player, it\u2019s probably gone for good.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
Mystery Bounties, by contrast, may not do this. Anyone who survives into the money has a reasonable change of taking the big bounty, with pros having a far more limited advantage compared to the likelihood of getting first place in a standard tournament. If the top bounty goes to a recreational player, it\u2019s probably gone for good.<\/p>\n
Late registration is too strong<\/h2>\n
Recreational players also suffer from the mystery bounty format. Amateur players tend to show up earlier to get the most playing time for their entry fee, but unlike normal PKOs, the format of mystery bounties encourages max late registration to get as close to the money as possible, when the whole prize pool is up for grabs.<\/p>\n
On many sites, there isn\u2019t even any thought allocated to the table draw for late registration, so all late-registering players get lumped on the same table together. This increases the incentive even further, since players are likely to have plenty of short stacks on their table who they cover and can win bounties from, even if they barely limp into the money.<\/p>\n
Collusion is encouraged<\/h2>\n
If you know that late registering at the same time as someone else is likely to end up with you both on the same table, then why not try to grind it out until the money and get it all-in against each other?<\/p>\n
\ntournament structures essentially made it possible to fold into the money with plenty of stalling<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n
This behavior was absolutely rife on 888 Poker until recently, where unusual tournament structures essentially made it possible to fold into the money with plenty of stalling. Combined with a lack of table randomization, any two players could easily take a freeroll, having both earned the min-cash.<\/p>\n
While you can\u2019t fold into the money anymore, it\u2019s enormously +EV for two players with the same stack to get it in with random cards against each other, just as it is in the early stages of a PKO. In mystery bounties, with late registration and shorter stacks, it\u2019s much easier to do so. Where does the extra EV come from? Everyone else playing the tournament who isn\u2019t colluding, of course.<\/p>\n
They\u2019re less secure<\/h2>\n
All poker tournaments, both live and online, have to take security seriously, and part of good security is minimizing your attack surface – the number of different parts of your operation that can potentially be exploited.<\/p>\n
Online poker sites have verified RNGs, so this isn\u2019t so much of a problem, although it does still expand that surface. For live poker, however, security is a bit different. We have regular dealer changes, players can spot marked cards, we can see the decks coming out, and we can observe what everyone at the table is doing. <\/p>\n