Posts Tagged ‘rush poker’
Review: Rush Poker Mobile
There is obvious untapped potential for poker games playable on mobile devices. Full Tilt Poker’s fast-paced Rush Poker in particular is a great fit for this format. The relative speed of the game makes one-tabling it more tolerable, and the general aesthetic of speed poker fits well with that of the on-the-go smart phone/tablet user.
While I see tremendous potential here, the current Rush Poker application, playable on Android devices, hasn’t quite got it right yet. It’s close: the graphics are clean and crisp, the interface is uncluttered, and all of the information you need is easy to find and read on a small screen. The major problem is that the bet slider is extremely difficult to control. This combined with the generally short time to act allotted in Rush Poker games and the occasional lag left me intermittently timing out and folding or settling for a bet size that was merely in the neighborhood of what I wanted.
On my Droid X, the application was somewhat slow to load and connect to the server initially, but once it was up and running, the lag that I experienced on the Verizon network, even from rural Texas, wasn’t in itself unmanageable. The only problem is that it ate a second or so off of the time that I had to fiddle awkwardly with the bet slider.
Top Ten Things I’m Thankful for in Poker This Year
Happy Thanksgiving! Here in the US, today is a day for reflecting on all that you’re thankful for in life. Here’s my poker list:
10. Sharron Angle- Thanks for being so goddamn crazy that you couldn’t even get elected as a Republican in Nevada during the 2010 midterms. If anyone remotely competent had gotten your party’s nomination, poker players would be without our friend Harry Reid in the Senate.

9. The 2+2 Pokercast- Fantastic free entertainment! They have consistently great guests and keep me in the loop about both important developments in the poker world and the best photoshop threads in BBV4L. The Pokercast is a regular companion when I’m grinding the Sunday Majors.
8. Barney Frank- If we see fully legalized and regulated online poker in the US anytime soon, it will be because of Barney Frank. So here’s to you, you beautiful curmudgeonly bastard!
7. Rush Poker- I buy the hype; this is a major development that will change the face of online poker. It’s fast, it’s fun, and it’s bringing in new recreational players. Now let’s see some heads up Rush in 2011!
6. My $25,000 Suckout- It was the single biggest pot of my career, and I needed a miracle to win it.
Four Underbets in One Hand
This wasn’t anything that I planned from the get-go. It was just that on each street, I kept feeling like he could be weak enough for an underbet to show a profit. I almost shoved the turn, and then I was like, “Screw it, 80% of what he folds to a shove probably folds for 1/3 pot”. Given that he called, that might not be true, but it just made the river shove that much more profitable. By the way, Villain has only about $260 left in his stack, so even though I potted it, the shove was effectively half-pot.
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold’em, $4.00 BB (9 handed) – Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
SB ($453.80)
BB ($418)
UTG ($400)
UTG+1 ($402)
MP1 ($402)
MP2 ($427.20)
MP3 ($400)
CO ($240)
Hero (Button) ($962)
Preflop: Hero is Button with A
, 9
6 folds, Hero bets $8, SB calls $6, BB raises to $36, Hero raises to $77, 1 fold, BB calls $41
Flop: ($162) 6
, K
, 7
(2 players)
BB checks, Hero bets $66, BB calls $66
Turn: ($294) 4
(2 players)
BB checks, Hero bets $99, BB calls $99
River: ($492) 3
(2 players)
BB checks, Hero bets $492, 1 fold
Total pot: $492 | Rake: $3
Results:
Hero didn’t show A
, 9
(nothing).
Outcome: Hero won $489
Bluffing and Bluff-Catching With the Same Hand
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold’em, $4.00 BB (9 handed) – Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
MP3 ($126.70)
CO ($508.10)
Button ($470.80)
SB ($443.50)
Hero (BB) ($823)
UTG ($469.40)
UTG+1 ($793.10)
MP1 ($400)
MP2 ($376.90)
Preflop: Hero is BB with 9
, 10
1 fold, UTG+1 bets $12, 4 folds, Button calls $12, 1 fold, Hero calls $8
Flop: ($38) J
, 5
, 10
(3 players)
Hero bets $28, UTG+1 calls $28, Button calls $28
Turn: ($122) 3
(3 players)
Hero bets $99, 1 fold, Button calls $99
River: ($320) 5
(2 players)
Hero checks, Button bets $210, Hero calls $210
Total pot: $740 | Rake: $3
Results:
Button had K
, Q
(one pair, fives).
Hero had 9
, 10
(two pair, tens and fives).
Outcome: Hero won $737
UTG is a predictable TAG regular, and BTN is a loose-ish random. I donk the flop because my hand isn’t good enough to call a c-bet but also doesn’t generally want to see the flop check around. Also I am already thinking about possibly getting UTG off of an overpair by three-barreling.
After the flop action, I am confident that UTG has a better hand than mine and that BTN is on a draw. The turn bet puts a lot of pressure on UTG. Not just anyone will fold top pair/an overpair here, but I think he will, if not now then on the river. Of course having him fold and BTN call is the ideal outcome.
I <3 LAGtards
FWIW I shouldn’t have 3-bet this guy pre-flop because he rarely calls but often 4-bets and KQs isn’t quite so good that I’m happy about 3-bet-calling it (although I did after remembering who this guy was).
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold’em, $4.00 BB (9 handed) – Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
CO ($205.20)
Button ($615)
Hero (SB) ($1643.25)
BB ($439.60)
UTG ($464.10)
UTG+1 ($1420.30)
MP1 ($426.70)
MP2 ($406)
MP3 ($400)
Preflop: Hero is SB with K
, Q
6 folds, Button bets $8, Hero raises to $32, 1 fold, Button raises to $70, Hero calls $38
Flop: ($144) 6
, A
, 8
(2 players)
Hero checks, Button bets $20, Hero raises to $123, Button raises to $545 (All-In), Hero calls $422
Turn: ($1234) K
(2 players, 1 all-in)
River: ($1234) J
(2 players, 1 all-in)
Total pot: $1234 | Rake: $3
Results:
Button had 9
, Q
(high card, Ace).
Hero had K
, Q
(flush, Ace high).
Outcome: Hero won $1231
His flop shove is atrocious because he’s so often drawing slim to dead when called. Check-raising his underbet is very important. Although he probably will fold sometimes, there’s no way he makes a bet like that without expecting me to play back at a fair bit of the time. That means that he’s sometimes trying to induce with some big hand (a set, perhaps) and also that he’ll float and/or rebluff it. Although I have blockers to his rebluffing range, we can see that he’s willing to be quite liberal about it.
Droid X
I finally got around to buying a new phone today, after having run out my contract with Sprint months ago. I’d been wavering between a Droid and an Iphone for a while, and then Full Tilt went and made the decision for me by releasing a Beta version of Rush Poker runnable only on Droid. I already knew I wanted to be with Verizon, so it was just a question of whether to get the Droid X or the Incredible. I figured the larger screen would be good for poker, so I went for the Droid X. Only had it a few hours, but so far it seems pretty cool.
The guy who sold it to me was pretty ridiculous. I came in knowing what I wanted: which phone, which plan, etc. He was immediately trying to sell me on a two-year contract and downright distraught when I declined the insurance. I believe, “I would never have a $500 phone without insurance.” As a debater, I’m always tempted to try to refute stupid arguments like this, but I have to remind myself that this isn’t a situation where I’m going to convince him of anything. He may or may not actually realize why it’s a bad investment, but it’s not like he’s ever going to be like, “Oh hey you’re right that insurance totally is a losing proposition for anyone who can afford to buy a new phone if necessary.”
What’s Your Play? Quads Full of Fours
Thanks to all the commenters who have contributed to some very good discussion this week. Let’s keep it going!
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold’em, $4.00 BB (9 handed) – Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
Button ($518.20)
SB ($490.30)
BB ($276.80)
Hero (UTG) ($773.50)
UTG+1 ($1109.10)
MP1 ($154.10)
MP2 ($1936.65)
MP3 ($943.80)
CO ($517)
Preflop: Hero is UTG with 8
, 8
Hero calls $4, 4 folds, CO bets $22, 3 folds, Hero calls $18
Flop: ($50) 8
, 4
, 4
(2 players)
Hero checks, CO bets $28, Hero calls $28
Turn: ($106) 4
(2 players)
Hero checks, CO checks
River: ($106) 8
(2 players)
Hero ??
Villain is a decent regular, a bit on the tight side but smart and capable. What do you do here and why?
A Less Successful Bluff
I’ve bragged about some creative bluffs recently, so here’s one where I got owned:
Full Tilt No-Limit Hold’em, $4.00 BB (9 handed) – Full-Tilt Converter Tool from FlopTurnRiver.com
SB ($434)
BB ($160)
UTG ($400)
UTG+1 ($641.60)
Hero (MP1) ($1081.40)
MP2 ($418.40)
MP3 ($1143)
CO ($131)
Button ($402)
Preflop: Hero is MP1 with Q
, Q
1 fold, UTG+1 bets $12, Hero calls $12, 6 folds
Flop: ($30) 4
, 9
, 10
(2 players)
UTG+1 checks, Hero bets $9, UTG+1 calls $9
Turn: ($48) 7
(2 players)
UTG+1 checks, Hero bets $15, UTG+1 raises to $64, Hero calls $49
River: ($176) 7
(2 players)
UTG+1 bets $140, Hero raises to $996.40 (All-In), UTG+1 calls $416.60 (All-In)
Total pot: $1289.20 | Rake: $3
Results:
UTG+1 had A
, A
(two pair, Aces and sevens).
Hero had Q
, Q
(two pair, Queens and sevens).
Outcome: UTG+1 won $1286.20
When he check-raises the turn, I realize there’s a substantial risk that I’m not good. I don’t see him playing any full houses this way, so I went for it.

