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Old 03-24-2007, 10:40 PM
Albert Moulton Albert Moulton is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Live Full Ring NLHE
Posts: 2,377
Default Re: Question about no-electronic transfer, online poker

[ QUOTE ]
OK, lets play 1/2 NL, folded to the button who calls. SB folds and BB checks. Pot is now $0.00 as $4 is taken for the drop and $1 is taken for the jackpot. This sounds like fun.

[/ QUOTE ]

This is how I play every week at my local casino. It works fine because the blinds can chop if button folds. Meanwhile, if button doesn't fold, then button should raise since if he wins the pot preflop, then there is no drop. But if button limps, as you suggest, then SB can still fold, and BB can then chose to raise or say bad things about the button in the chat box.

If you can chop in a live game, then the software I'm envisioning would allow for a chop option as well as a live staddle.

But you make it sound as if this game would not be fun. But I think it would because even with the fixed drop rates, depositing live to play on-line would allow for smaller limit games, multi-tabling, hand histories with statistical analysis, player notes, HUDs, and playing at home without needing to drive to or from the casino. Those are a lot of benefits. Plus, in large pots, I would expect to save a little money in a fixed rake as opposed to a percentage rake. So, if the buy-ins were deeper (i.e. 100bb or 200bb or even more) because the limits were lower (i.e. .01/.02 to .1/.25, etc), then the games would be pretty good.

This set up would eliminate many of the problems sited by UIGEA supporters.

First, it would be harder for underage players to play. Second, it would be hard for anybody foreign group to launder money. Although I think the money laundering objection to online poker, in particular, is pretty lame. Third, it would allow the casinos to keep players in legal juristications. Fourth, for large tournament wins and jackpots, the casios could file W2-Gs like they do now.

I suspect that this might actually be legal if the players were California residents and the rake conformed to California law.
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