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Do you play satellites?

Bawse

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Satellites are a good way to win tickets to bigger tournaments.

If I remember right. I once satellited into a $200 buy-in, $250k guaranteed years ago for like a $1. One back to back tourneys to qualify.
It was on Partypoker/Bwin years ago.

Does anyone play satellites? What's the biggest tourney you satellited into?
 
Sattys are great because often the players do not understand the icm of the format.
 
ItsOkToEatFish said:
Sattys are great because often the players do not understand the icm of the format.
 
Bawse said:
ItsOkToEatFish said:
Sattys are great because often the players do not understand the icm of the format.

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In poker, the Independent Chip Model[1] is a mathematical model that approximates a player's overall equity in an incomplete tournament. David Harville first developed the model in a 1973 paper on horse racing;[2] in 1987, Mason Malmuth independently rediscovered it for poker.[3] In the ICM, all players have comparable skill, so that current stack sizes entirely determine the probability distribution for a player's final ranking. The model then approximates this probability distribution and computes expected prize money.[4][5]
Poker players often use the term ICM to mean a simulator that helps a player strategize a tournament. An ICM can be applied to answer specific questions, such as:[6][7]
  • The range of hands that a player can move all in with, considering the play so far
  • The range of hands that a player can call another player's all in with or move all in over the top; and which course of action is optimal, considering the remaining opponent stacks
  • When discussing a deal, how much money each player should get
Such simulators rarely use an unmodified Malmuth-Harville model. In addition to the payout structure, a Malmuth-Harville ICM calculator would also require the chip counts of all players as input,[8] which may not always be available. The Malmuth-Harville model also gives poor estimates for unlikely events, and is computationally intractable with many players.
 
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