Saturday, 1 December 2012

Travel Tours To Australia - Monitoring Your Q and M in Poker Tournaments


At least mathematically based on calculable conditions at any given time, you do have tools and indicators available which can help you make a solid decision, when playing online though. Some of them may be as unique and challenging as the chat you try to decipher coming from your opponents. There are numerous details to monitor in online No Limit Holdem Tournaments.

The indicators are M and Q. Two of those conditions are often used by professional players at live tournaments and are critical to success online as well.

Other players with better M's will start to steal your blinds and risk losing a pot in order to eliminate you from competition, as your stack (or M) gets lower. A minimum pot is made up of a combination of blinds and antes which constantly escalate as a tournament progresses. M stands for M ratio which is basically a stack comparison between yourself and the size of the current minimum pot.

Your Q would be 3, if on the other hand you had 3 times the average stack. 5. Then you would have a Q of , so if your stack is half the size of the average stack. Q is a comparison of your stack to other player's stacks by determining the average of stack size of all players left in the tournament and affixing a representative comparison value of one to your stack.

Either the Q or the M may be more important as an indicator at any given time, and depending on the structure and/or dynamics of play, you should know both of these numbers at all times in the tournament.

You may indeed be more compelled to act a certain way in a tournament based on your Q. M isn't always the main indicator to consider, however. The lower mzones are red which is from 1 to 5 and the all but out grey mzone which means your M ratio is actually below 1. While orange is from 10 to 15, yellow will be from 15 to 20, green is for an M of 20 or more. M is usually more relevant than Q within normally structured tournament and should always be known as well as its corresponding color zone.

You need to know what that strength of your hole cards are and use position to take down as many pots preflop as possible. Then the Mzone really don't matter much at all, if most of the players at your table have similar (low) M ratios that put them in Orange or red Mzones, in other words. The reason why Q may be more relevant than the M is because of stack parity at a game critical intersect.

Knowing the difference between M and Q in poker tournaments can be critical to your success in moving up the money and playing mathematically correct at game critical intersects.

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