Quote:
Originally Posted by chillrob
My evidence for why (I think) the TDA rules are bad is that they disallow some people from raising the amount they desire.
I don't think the two part raise is confusing at all, and holding it to a minimum raise certainly doesn't make it any less confusing.
So do string raise rules. Are they bad too?
There is a reason we require bets and raises to be made in unconfusing and straightforward ways, and specifically say you bear the responsibility if you do it in a non-standard way. (Incidentally this is a lot easier in limit games where there are only two bet size options and no large denom chips to worry about.)
In general, I do agree with you about allowing people to bet what they want to bet. That should be the goal. And against me, in the games I play, I am never looking to turboact after someone else so if they can make the case and get their bet to match what they intended I am fine with it, but often there are other players involved who maybe don't see it the same way.
It is IMO most definitely more confusing to allow the three step raising process:
1. Announce raise
2. Put out calling chips
3. Put out additional raising chips
for these reasons:
A. If someone doesn't hear you say raise, the initial chips look exactly like a silent call, which happens all the ****ing time, and can incite people at act behind you thinking you have called
B. It is the only time you are allowed to make you bet in two motions without a verbalized amount first
C. There is no practical reason you need to do it, allowing it has no real practical value; you can just as easily put out the full amount in one motion, or verbalize first
On the other hand, I guess this is also true if you verbalize an amount that someone doesn't hear, and then you start putting your chips out in pieces, they might also misunderstand the bet and act before you're done, which also does happen. So maybe not quite as straightforward as I originally though. Though I still think eliminating this bet method is a net positive for sure.
Holding someone to a min raise is exactly what you do any other time someone announces raise and puts out less than the minimum raise amount, so I don't think it's at all confusing, though I do agree it is doing something that was not the raisers intent most likely.
Last edited by dinesh; 11-14-2024 at 11:17 AM.