It is a dream closely nurtured by many aspiring poker players: To ditch the dreary 9-5 job to make a living from a game that thrives on infinite skill, knowledge and, above all, wit. What freedom!
Across the world, millions have tried and failed their hands at earning a crust from the infamous game. Ever since the internet revolution a new evolution of online players have spawned across the globe.
But is a run of Big Slicks enough to give up the day job?
Winning $140,000 (£100,000) might be enough to take a long, well earned sabbatical – but will not put bread on the table for a lifetime.
The good news for wannabe poker entrepreneurs is that the payouts from many casinos are uncapped, claims Richard Prew, media director of poker association, APAT. He says there are ‘no winning limits’ in licenced UK venues. APAT also advises there is no substitute to vast pots of money and playing experience when it comes to bringing home the bacon from poker.
Having the right psychological makeup and personality is also a trump card when playing for small fortunes. Players must also have the mettle and money to ride out the bad times when suffering streaks of bad luck, he stresses.
So who actually makes a living from poker? Prew believes the ‘majority’ of poker players play the game for fun and/or to supplement their income, with a small nucleus of professionals doing so to make a living. Traditionally, casinos don’t offer much value for money for recreational players, he says. But for high stake players, wanting to gamble on high stake tours, there are enticing yet risky opportunities to make fast and furious bucks.
The Grosvenor UK Poker Tour, launched in 2007, is a series of poker festivals that take place across venues and online. Each festival features several warm up events with buy ins ranging from $140 (£100) to $1400 (£1000) for the four-day main event. The stakes are raised to $4199 (£3000) at the end of the year for the tour’s Grand Final. As with the scale of poker played across the world, its winnings are far from loose change: Prize money for the televised main events in the tour’s first year topped $4.9n (£3.5m).
Professionals, amateurs and internet qualifiers number those who have pitted their wits for a place in history and life changing amounts of money.
With one player winning $105,000 (£75,000) for the first event this year, livelihoods can clearly be made – but for how long? Surely the odds of winning such sums over a lifetime are slim? Maybe, maybe not. Whatever the chances, it is vital the player knows the game inside out before he or she endeavours to pay off the mortgage. Again, having a king’s ransom in cash reserves goes without saying!
For online poker players, Prew advises there is no best global region in which to play poker, provided the site is international and properly licensed and governed. Legally above boards sites, he says, are carefully regulated, and display terms and conditions for banking, fraud prevention and account protection.
Those who play online or at casinos every Friday night will not need a maths lesson to realise that poker can be a slippery science to make a living. Likewise. APAT advises that cheap ‘Rebuy’ poker tournaments, which enable players to buy more chips when they lose them, are not recommended as poker gold mines.
Organisations such as APAT, Sky Poker, Virgin and PKR aim to provide recreational players with professional online and poker tours with ‘many starting chips’ and buy ins for under $140 (£100). Such events sell out within minutes of going on sale.
Inevitably, these sums are not enough to live on for a year; the art of poker playing demands a seasoned rounder not only to make a living, but to cover losses.
Unlike other games, practice makes viable, but not perfect poker. This, of course, is the substance of dreams. Few of us will be lucky enough to take home $8.5m (£5.8m) as won by Peter Eastgate, at last year’s World Series of Poker final. But there’s no harm in dreaming is there?
Never sign up at an online casino until you have thoroughly researched the Company and have checked out all the major points above, then and only then can you be sure that you are not setting yourself up to be scammed and robbed of your hard earned cash.
Whatever your hobby, if you enjoy it almost always a dream to make a living from it. Poker is no different. To achieve that dream of course takes skill and then it takes proper bankroll management. Never play for more than you can afford to lose. Focusing on large payouts from a single tournament is not that way to look at it. To win one takes as much luck as anything. If you continually improve and practice proper bankroll management then eventually you will reach the level where you can live off of poker alone.