GGPoker’s $5M GGMasters Anniversary Event Hits Another Wall After Day 2 Technical Meltdown
The much-anticipated $5 million guaranteed GGMasters Anniversary tournament has hit yet another snag, leaving players frustrated and GGPoker scrambling for answers. The $150 buy-in event, already rescheduled after a catastrophic crash last week, suffered a fresh round of technical difficulties on Monday—this time during Day 2 play.
More than an hour after the disruption, GGPoker attempted to resume the action, rolling player stacks back to Level 17. But it didn’t take long for the online poker giant to decide it was better to shut the whole thing down entirely.
This marks the second time the tournament has run into major trouble. Just a week earlier, the site crashed with over 20,000 players still registered. On Monday, when play was halted again, there were still over 12,000 players in the field. GGPoker addressed the situation publicly via X (formerly Twitter), writing:
“We have paused Day 2 of GGMasters Anniversary to investigate a table balancing issue. Thanks for your patience, and we will update this thread asap.”
Players Speak Out After Chaotic Restart
Naturally, the chaos sparked plenty of reaction from the poker community, especially those who were still in the tournament. Several players took to social media to describe bizarre experiences at their tables, including playing heads-up at the start of Day 2 in what was supposed to be a massive multi-table tournament.
“I started Day 2 with 80 big blinds and now have 64.7bb without playing a hand,” one player (@Raw_Nit) posted. Another player (@ispLashcrans) described the confusion:
“It felt like stacks were rearranged by size at my table. I’ve never seen that before. I even started Day 2 playing heads-up for a few hands until the table filled up. Such a strange way to begin the day.”
Screenshots of the troubled tournament, shared by player @tzb_pnd, circulated widely, showing the odd table setups and fueling conspiracy theories. Some players speculated that the issues might have been intentional, given that the event had roughly $100,000 in overlay—a number that typically makes operators sweat. However, most recognized that for a company of GGPoker’s size, with its deep pockets and recent $500 million acquisition of the World Series of Poker brand, eating a six-figure overlay would barely dent the balance sheet.
A Refund, But No Resolution
As player complaints mounted, many called for a full rollback to the very start of Day 2. GGPoker took a middle-ground approach, returning play to Level 17 instead. That decision didn’t sit well with players who had already busted earlier in the day, effectively leaving them out of luck.
Before the anger could settle, GGPoker made a final call—scrap the whole event. The company announced the complete cancellation of the GGMasters Anniversary tournament, triggering a refund process. Per GGPoker’s policy, all remaining players will receive a refund split: half the buy-in returned directly, and the other half distributed based on each player’s chip count at the time of cancellation.
While refunds offer some financial closure, the damage to player trust may linger far longer. The $5 million guaranteed GGMasters Anniversary was meant to be a celebration of GGPoker’s rise to the top of the online poker food chain. Instead, it’s become a cautionary tale in how technical missteps can sour even the most ambitious events.
The much-anticipated $5 million guaranteed GGMasters Anniversary tournament has hit yet another snag, leaving players frustrated and GGPoker scrambling for answers. The $150 buy-in event, already rescheduled after a catastrophic crash last week, suffered a fresh round of technical difficulties on Monday—this time during Day 2 play.
More than an hour after the disruption, GGPoker attempted to resume the action, rolling player stacks back to Level 17. But it didn’t take long for the online poker giant to decide it was better to shut the whole thing down entirely.
This marks the second time the tournament has run into major trouble. Just a week earlier, the site crashed with over 20,000 players still registered. On Monday, when play was halted again, there were still over 12,000 players in the field. GGPoker addressed the situation publicly via X (formerly Twitter), writing:
“We have paused Day 2 of GGMasters Anniversary to investigate a table balancing issue. Thanks for your patience, and we will update this thread asap.”
Players Speak Out After Chaotic Restart
Naturally, the chaos sparked plenty of reaction from the poker community, especially those who were still in the tournament. Several players took to social media to describe bizarre experiences at their tables, including playing heads-up at the start of Day 2 in what was supposed to be a massive multi-table tournament.
“I started Day 2 with 80 big blinds and now have 64.7bb without playing a hand,” one player (@Raw_Nit) posted. Another player (@ispLashcrans) described the confusion:
“It felt like stacks were rearranged by size at my table. I’ve never seen that before. I even started Day 2 playing heads-up for a few hands until the table filled up. Such a strange way to begin the day.”
Screenshots of the troubled tournament, shared by player @tzb_pnd, circulated widely, showing the odd table setups and fueling conspiracy theories. Some players speculated that the issues might have been intentional, given that the event had roughly $100,000 in overlay—a number that typically makes operators sweat. However, most recognized that for a company of GGPoker’s size, with its deep pockets and recent $500 million acquisition of the World Series of Poker brand, eating a six-figure overlay would barely dent the balance sheet.
A Refund, But No Resolution
As player complaints mounted, many called for a full rollback to the very start of Day 2. GGPoker took a middle-ground approach, returning play to Level 17 instead. That decision didn’t sit well with players who had already busted earlier in the day, effectively leaving them out of luck.
Before the anger could settle, GGPoker made a final call—scrap the whole event. The company announced the complete cancellation of the GGMasters Anniversary tournament, triggering a refund process. Per GGPoker’s policy, all remaining players will receive a refund split: half the buy-in returned directly, and the other half distributed based on each player’s chip count at the time of cancellation.
While refunds offer some financial closure, the damage to player trust may linger far longer. The $5 million guaranteed GGMasters Anniversary was meant to be a celebration of GGPoker’s rise to the top of the online poker food chain. Instead, it’s become a cautionary tale in how technical missteps can sour even the most ambitious events.