The third inductee into the Internet Pokers Wall of Fame is:
Dominik Kofert
The founder of pokerstrategy.com. For those living in North America, pokerstrategy.com is not a huge deal. It’s not even a site that I’m very familiar with. I’m not even a member there, and the most time I’ve spent on this site was researching this induction. But it is a juggernaut of online poker. It has the highest Alexa rank of any poker site that I found. Over a billion page views. Higher than 2+2, higher than PokerStars itself. It is unquestionably the most successful affiliate site/system in the history of poker. They are particularly responsible for the growth of poker in Germany and Russia and producing legions of absurdly good players from those two countries. PokerStrategy has millions of users, and operates in 12 different languages. Their affiliate system was brilliantly different from any other before it. In contrast with the 99.99% of affiliates out there who were just attempting to get as much site traffic as possible with as many bells and whistles trying to churn players through, they actually taught them how to play poker as they provided them with free money to play, and a tremendously high percentage of those signups would end up as lifetime grinders, paying tons of rake, and lining the pockets of Mr. Kofert.
To its detractors, PokerStrategy’s impact is not all positive. It has been a factory of multitabling grinders and superstars alike, while introducing relatively few fish. Some would argue that their lasting impact is its contribution to the accelerating difficulty and overfishing of online poker.
But in the end, PokerStrategy’s impact on the game resonates tremendously, more than most people — including myself, give it credit for. I may not be a member of PokerStrategy, but 7 million others — a number that includes presumably very little multiaccounting — are. Kofert debuted in 2012 on the Bluff Poker 20 in 12th place, and fell to #15 in 2013. That Kofert was listed behind people like Ray Lesniak, and Frank and Lorenzo Fertitta — people who were only relevant in one US state, shows how little this juggernaut was truly appreciated. After all, PokerStrategy has more members than there are in fact adults of legal age to play poker in either Nevada or New Jersey.
Kofert sold the company he built in 2013 for 38.3M Euros ($50M) in 2013, shortly after the aforementioned Poker 20 ranking. The announcement listed its profits at 19.5M Euros. I don’t know if there’s many people out there who have made that kind of money from the internet pokers, but if there are, we likely know their names. When it comes to Dominik Kofert: if you don’t know, now you know.
Dominik Kofert, welcome to the IPWOF!