How Does Bankroll Size Change Decision-Making at the Table?

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Ace

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Players often say they stick to strategy, but bankroll pressure quietly affects choices. Smaller bankrolls can lead to overly cautious play, while larger ones may encourage loose decisions. Do you think your own risk tolerance changes depending on your current roll?
 
Bankroll size can have a big impact on decision-making. When your bankroll is healthy for the stakes you're playing, it's easier to stay patient and make decisions based on strategy. When it's too small, players often become overly cautious or emotionally attached to individual pots, which can lead to poor decisions.
 
Bankroll size can have a big impact on decision-making. When your bankroll is healthy for the stakes you're playing, it's easier to stay patient and make decisions based on strategy. When it's too small, players often become overly cautious or emotionally attached to individual pots, which can lead to poor decisions.
I agree that when you have a bigger bankroll, you get confidence to play, where as with small bankroll you will be playing cautiously. You might be able to take little risk with bigger bankroll.
 
Bankroll pressure changes everything whether people admit it or not 😂. When my balance is small, i suddenly become a careful strategist overnight. I’ll fold hands I normally play because losing feels painful. But once bankroll is healthy, I gain more confidence.
 
In cash games, having a larger bankroll and playing deep-stacked allows you to loosen up your game, see more flops, and use your stack size to apply pressure, bully pots, or extract maximum value from opponents.

In tournaments, I prefer having plenty of buy-ins available because it helps reduce the mental pressure that comes with the inevitable swings and variance of tournament poker. Knowing I'm properly bankrolled allows me to focus on making the best decisions rather than worrying about the outcome of any single event.
 

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