Massive Profit at the Micros is a free guide on how to crush the micros by BlackRain79. To request to use any part of this book in any way, write to: blackrain79@dragthebar.com To order additional copies, please visit: www.blackrain79.com.
Nathan “BlackRain79” Williams is back with a follow-up to his highly regarded debut strategy book Crushing the Microstakes, this time moving up in stakes to give readers advice about Modern Small Stakes: Advanced Strategies for Dominating Today’s No-Limit Hold’em Cash Games. As with his previous book, Williams’s new title offers readers comprehensive, well-considered advice about how best to approach lower-stakes no-limit hold’em.
Originally from Canada, Williams started out a decade ago playing the play money games online, eventually starting a small bankroll after managing to sell some play money chips. From there Williams spent several years playing microstakes where he became one of the biggest winners at those limits, earning enough to quit his full-time job and eventually earn a reputation as the unofficial king of the micros. In late 2011 Williams compiled what he’d learned from the millions of hands he’d played at those lowest of limits in his book Crushing the Microstakes. The work represented a unique contribution to poker strategy insofar as it focused solely on the lowest stakes no-limit hold’em games online (NL2, NL4, and NL5), with a great deal of concrete advice about the types of players and styles one encounters at those limits. While it might seem as though such a book would address only a narrow range of players, the fact is nearly everyone who plays online starts with the “micros,” and many who stick with game are content to remain there. Thus it wasn’t surprising to see Crushing the Microstakes be so well received given the wealth of smartly-presented and useful strategic teaching it delivers. Cdg To Vcd Converter V 1.1.1 Serial on this page. In the introduction to Modern Small Stakes, Williams characterizes his first book as “basically a set of training wheels for beginners and people struggling at the lowest limits. Amar Bangla Word Software. ” Meanwhile, with MSS Williams is “taking the training wheels off” to move beyond fundamentals needed to achieve handsome win rates at the micros to discuss more advanced strategies needed in today’s NL10, NL25, NL50, and NL100 online games.
The key difference — one that guides all of the advice in MSS — is that the highly exploitative and essentially unbalanced strategies Williams recommends to those looking to win at microstakes aren’t as effective when moving up in limits and facing a higher percentage of thinking, savvy players. Thus a lot of Williams’s focus concerns learning how to balance one’s play in order to succeed against opponents who are more consciously focused upon and reacting to the meaning behind others’ actions. In other words, while Crushing the Microstakes offers a lot of practical tips spelling out effective approaches to commonly-faced situations, Modern Small Stakes focuses more on how to think about why some lines work better than others, as well as the need to adapt and respond when decisions become more complex. As Williams puts it, there are fewer “‘if A, then do B’ type explanations” and more attention given to trying “to understand the reasons behind the plays that you are making.” The book is lengthy (exactly 500 pages), but well organized with the first third devoted to discussing useful concepts and the rest covering strategies for handling dozens of different hold’em decisions with more than 100 sample hands used to illustrate the advice given. Along with some general pointers about win rates, volume, bankroll management, setting up a HUD (Heads-Up Display), and game and table selection, a lot of that first third of the book focuses on profiling and categorizing opponents one is likely to encounter in the NL10, NL25, NL50, and NL100 games. Baixar Filme Panico Na Floresta 2 Dublado Avi there. Such an emphasis early on helps underscore a key distinction between the micros and small stakes games, since (as Williams showed in CMS) there is much less variety among the players at NL2, NL4, and NL5.