Quote:
Originally Posted by noobis
I post hands when am not sure about a hands and i also try post my opinion for other guys hands.But now,i play nl2 and 5 and i think its not to many hands that i really dont know what to do.Not cos am Tom Dwan of something but cos on that level pll dont press me and my spots its really stantand moves for me.
Plus i see a lot of bad regulars or marginal winners on micros who give advices and imo this advices are bad,i dont tell that they all sucks.I see a lot of good regs here but i am 20months here and i know how are good or no,someone who dont know that,he will confused.
Update:Month start (again) bad,am down and atm play 24 tables nl2 and will try playing 300k hands this month.
So you can beat what, 10NL? Ok, how good is that? It's nothing. So when you think you know the answer to the hand like how to play it, why is that so etc. - ask yourself, what are the chances that you're actually correct and that your thought process would apply to a higher stakes game? What are the chances that you didn't miss something that might change everything?
You can stay at the micros all you want, make a bit of $$, but there's a lot more to it and you probably want to move up - so why not start learning now? Especially when it's free..
Regarding the quality of comments, well sure there's lots of bad advices in the micro sections but from what I've seen in this thread - there's quite a few guys from whom you'd benefit a lot. Besides, even bad advices make you think, i.e. why are they bad? What is wrong with them? It's all about thinking and not just getting the answer w/o the thought process behind it.
TL;DR I like this thread, I like your efforts, Im probably not the only one here like this so you posting 1-3 hands a day ITT would most likely result in a ****load of solid analysis/advices that would tremendously improve your game.
Or you can go the 500k hands a month route and learn everything from experience. Don't know too many examples for whom it worked out better than doing some actual off-table work. I've seen numerous examples of guys crushing i.e. SSNL saying that they regret playing too many hands and not working on their game - it costed them a lot of $$$. Well, not real $ but potential $.