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Psychological Concepts
Changing Pace
One thing that most people,
including myself at times, do wrong is play consistently. In other words, though
you may play your AQ different preflop sometimes and when you hit a A or Q, you
may bet a different amount (in No-Limit) or choose to jam the pot at a different
time (in Limit). However, most decent players will be able to identify you as a
certain type of player: tight-aggressive, very-tight aggressive, etc.
A way to help your earnings is
to simply switch up your play sometimes. This way, when they're expecting that
you're going to bluff, you bluff rarely so they'll call you more. Likewise, if
your bets are for value, you start to bluff at the pot a lot. People generally
won't catch on if you do this discreetly, and it can add more mystery to your
play.
This strategy is obviously
more effective at No-Limit because it is much easier to bluff at NL. However, it
can be used at Fixed-Limit as well. Generally, the game must be 5 or fewer
people (preferably 4 people total.) With stakes large enough, you can
effectively bluff at flop/turn if you played it tight at first, and you will
receive more callers for big bets if you bluffed earlier.
For those of you who are
mathematically inclined, I'll use some game theory to prove my assertions.
Suppose you are playing a soccer match and you have a penalty kick. You predict
that if you kick left, you will have an 80% chance of scoring if the goalie does
not expect left, and you have a 60% of scoring if you kick to the right and the
goalie does not expect right. However, if the goalie blocks left and you kick
left, you only have a 45% chance of scoring, and if the goalie blocks to the
right, you will only score 35% of the time
As you can see, even though
shooting left may be what you are best at, it is in your interest to shoot right
from time to time because if the goalie always knows you will shoot left, you
will score less than if you shot to the right sometimes.
Now, instead of percent chance
of scoring, think of the numbers as hourly profit. Left means playing your
standard tight-aggressive game and the right means playing a more loose game.
Bad players may not 'block' at all or will always block the wrong way, so you
can keep on playing your standard tight-aggressive game and earn 80 an hour.
However, against good players, they'll quickly realize what you are doing and
defend against it. Your profit drops down to 45 an hour.
Now, suppose you play
tight-aggressive (left) 70% of the time and looser (right) 30% of the time. If
they continue to just play against you as if you were a tight-aggressive all the
time, you will earn 49.5 an hour (.7 * 45 + .3 * 60).
Now, if your opponents caught
on to what you were doing and played you as a tight-aggressive (block left) 70%
of the time and a looser player (block right) 30% of the time, your profit would
actually increase as long as they don't know exactly when you were playing which
way. Your profit would be (.7)(.7) * 45 + (.7)(.3) * 80 + (.7)(.3) * 60 +
(.3)(.3) * 35 =54.6
So, in order to defend against
changing pace, you need to know when they are changing pace. Obviously, if they
treated you as a tight-aggressive 70% of the time and all the time they treated
you as a tight aggressive you were one, your profit would drop. However, as
shown before, predicting a change of pace when there is none will actually help
the person who is changing pace, so people generally will treat you as the same
even when you switch your style!
Thus, I recommend you change
your pace some, but randomize it so they can't catch on and correctly predict
when you vary your style.
Note: This is only for
short handed games (6 or fewer people) and to be used mainly against good
players
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