For the episode of Justified, see Cash Game (Justified)
Cash game
Cash games, also sometimes referred to as ring games or live 🌛 action games, are poker games played with "real" chips and money at stake, often with no predetermined end time, with 🌛 players able to enter and leave as they see fit. In contrast, a poker tournament is played with tournament chips 🌛 worth nothing outside the tournament, with a definite end condition (usually, only one player left), and a specific roster of 🌛 competitors.
Rules [ edit ]
Players may freely buy into or cash out of a cash game between hands.[1] However, it is 🌛 normally prohibited for a player to remove a portion of his or her chips from the table. This is known 🌛 as "going south".[2] For example, if a player buys in forR$100, then winsR$100 (for a total stack ofR$200), the player 🌛 may not remove the originalR$100 buy-in while remaining seated. He would have to forfeit his seat, possibly wait to rejoin 🌛 the game, and buy in again forR$100; however, many cardrooms prohibit the practice of buying in again unless a certain 🌛 time period has elapsed before the player rejoins. Similarly, cash games are played for table stakes. If a player attempts 🌛 to put additional money onto the table (from his/her wallet) in the middle of a hand, he may not do 🌛 so until the conclusion of said hand.
In "no limit" poker cash games, some cardrooms have a maximum buy-in for cash 🌛 games. In limit poker games, there is seldom a maximum buy-in because betting limits already limit the amount a player 🌛 can wager on each hand.
In a casino, a rake is usually taken from a pot if a flop is shown 🌛 and the pot reaches certain values.[3] Some games take a time rake instead of a pot rake. In these games 🌛 players pay a seat charge every half-hour.
Ring games [ edit ]
While the terms "ring game" and "cash game" are often 🌛 considered synonymous in common usage, opinion differs on the true definition of "ring game". For example, in the glossary of 🌛 Doyle Brunson's Super System 2, a ring game is defined as "A game with a player in every seat, that 🌛 is, a full game—as opposed to a shorthanded game".[4] As such, the term "cash game" may be considered a more 🌛 precise depiction of the kind of game commonly found in most casinos or home venues; that is, a non-tournament game 🌛 played for actual money (or chips representing actual money), without regard for the number of players seated at the table 🌛 at any given time.
Comparison with tournament games [ edit ]
Tournaments and cash games have different basic strategies. One difference between 🌛 tournaments and cash games is that the blind/ante structure of tournaments increases periodically over the course of the tournament, whereas 🌛 the blind/ante structure of cash games remains constant. Another difference between the tournaments and cash games is that a tournament 🌛 sticks with a predetermined style of poker, and cash game players, depending on house rules, may have the option of 🌛 playing other types of card games. Some online cash games offer a variety of choices limited only by the game 🌛 software.
Other differences between cash games and tournament poker are that, in cash games sometimes straddles and chops are allowed. A 🌛 live straddle is a dark bet of two big blinds by the player first to act, who is then entitled 🌛 to bet again if the bet is not raised. A chop is an agreement between the players in the blinds 🌛 to retract their blind bets if no one else has bet. A chop prevents the casino from taking a rake 🌛 from the pot. Also, cash games sometimes allow players to reduce the element of luck (often called "variance", especially by 🌛 professional players) by splitting large all-in pots. Since online platforms can instantly calculate each player's pot equity at the time 🌛 they go all-in, some online cash games allow such pots to be split based on this equity. Players who opt 🌛 for such an arrangement will receive a share of the pot based on his or her odds of winning (from 🌛 the time all players still in the pot exposed their cards) once all of the cards have been dealt. An 🌛 alternative method of reducing variance, used both online and in live games, is to run the board multiple times to 🌛 ensure that the person with the best odds of winning gets the largest share of the pot more often.
Examples [ 🌛 edit ]
An example of a cash game is broadcast on the United States subscription-based streaming service PokerGO as High Stakes 🌛 Poker. The Bellagio casino's "Big Game" is a high-stakes permanent cash game, featuring a wide variety of rotating poker games 🌛 with and without limits.[5]