My PokerStars 10th Anniversary Reminiscences

As part of their 10th anniversary celebration, PokerStars asked their sponsored players for our early memories of playing on the site. You can find out how I got started on PokerStars in my recent piece for the PokerStars blog:

PokerStars was the first place that seemed to be in it for the long term. They had clearly invested in their product and their personnel. As a result, it seemed to be where all the best players were playing, both those I recognized from TV and the legends of the online poker forums.

What do you remember about the early days of PokerStars? When and why did you start playing there?

2 thoughts on “My PokerStars 10th Anniversary Reminiscences”

  1. Summer of 2003: I busted my first $25 bankroll on PartyPoker and wanted to try online poker again. I liked the fact that the board ran out a bit slower on Stars–I wanted to sweat my all-ins. A close friend and I used to swap some action on the $1-$3 huge-field NLHE tournaments and stay up late sweating each other and talking strategy. I was renting out a room in a frat house for $200/mo in New Haven. For a while this frat had a reputation as the “gay and/or Asian” fraternity. I am neither gay nor Asian, nor have I ever been a member of a frat, but it was a great place to spend a summer.

    It was apparent that PokerStars knew some things about customer service–even stuff that now gets taken for granted, e.g. that running huge-field tournaments is a great way to get people excited about poker, even if you don’t collect much rake from the tournament itself. I remember the first months of the VIP system, and how exciting it was, and how it felt so much more legitimate and fun than the gray-area (or worse) rakeback deals that were one’s only option at other sites. It was also a great way to easily measure how many hands you’d put in, and to set volume goals, if you were into that sort of thing.

    When $6/45-man and $11/45 tournaments were introduced, they were a great way to pump up one’s bankroll. Many other MTTSNG grinders have been better than me, but I think I was one of the first. In the spring of 2006, after I quit my job in Baltimore, I fondly remember grinding a few dozen SNGs and wandering around Charles Village, loving the city and wondering why the dog-poop-bag receptacles were positioned so high off the ground.

    In the fall of 2004, PokerStars was The Place for high-stakes HU SNGs. I didn’t play them, but they were great to sweat. Whenever I see “teacuppoker” I remember that he was Yahtzem’s first opponent in a $5K HU.

  2. I switched from Full Tilt to Stars to clear a PokerSavvy bonus a year ago. Reasons I stayed were the large player base & great software, and yeah, the reputation of the customer service was definitely a factor. In hind-sight I wonder if the somewhat shoddy customer service at Full Tilt was indicative of the deeper problems which emerged.

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