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Multi-Table or Move Up?

One huge advantage online poker has over live poker, aside from the valuable poker bonuses, is that online poker rooms allow you to play on more than one table at once, also known as multi-tabling.  Multi-tabling, for all intents and purposes, is why so many poker players are able to make a living playing online.  

Players typically begin multi-tabling after they have been beating their usual game for a while and want to embark on a quest to increase their win rates.  Some players who have beaten the games at one level, however, decide to just move up a level and continue playing a single table.  Why would someone multi-table to make more money rather than just move up, you ask?  After all, it seems like it would be harder to concentrate on more than one game, right?  

More Money, Less Stress

It is perfectly logical to think that if you are beating the games at a certain limit then it makes sense to move on up and start making more money at a higher limit.  For many players, this makes sense and works out great, even if there are some growing pains that come from moving up.  But with higher stakes comes greater variance – winning sessions pad your bankroll more than before and losing sessions shrink it faster.  

Therefore, the way to achieve a similar hourly win rate at lower stakes as you could at higher stakes games (let’s assume you would be a winning player if you moved up), while keeping the swings at tolerable levels is to play multiple tables.

I know I am about to oversimplify things, but, frankly, I don’t particularly feel like diving into much more than “Are You Smarter than a Fifth Grader” math right now.  Say you make five dollars per hour playing one table at your usual stakes.  If you move up to the next level, you feel that you could make ten dollars an hour.  Or, you could add another table of your usual stakes and now make five dollars an hour twice.  Add another, and you’re at fifteen dollars per hour total.  Magic!  Of course, your profitability will likely take a hit as you add tables (more difficult to process information and play optimally), so that hourly rate won’t be quite five dollars at each table, but if you play three or four tables simultaneously, chances are you can make more money per hour than you could at one table at higher stakes.  As an added bonus, your variance will not increase.  In fact, it may actually decrease, as you can offset a poor session at one table with a good session at another.

Plus, even if you feel you can make a profit if you move up, you may simply be more comfortable staying where you are.  And there is nothing wrong with that.  Poker is still a game, even if you can make a living playing it, so you might as well enjoy what you are doing.
 

Fringe Benefits

Another benefit to multi-tabling instead of moving up is the increased rakeback that you can earn.  Regardless of how well you do on any given day, rakeback will provide you with a relatively predictable stream of income.  If you play more than one table at a time, you have more than one income stream.  Again, going extremely basic on the math, if we assume that the pots, and thus the rake per hand, will double if you move up one level (obviously, we can’t assume this, but please humor me), you will earn the same rakeback at two tables of your usual level as you would at one table of a higher level.  Throw in a couple more tables, and now your rakeback is doubled.  This will help lower your variance even more, as your rakeback income can make up for a bad session.

One additional advantage to multi-tabling is that if you use poker analysis software, such as PokerTracker, you will be able to gather more data than you would be able to at a single table.  The more data you have on yourself and your opponents, the more accurate analyses you can make on your game and theirs.

Make it Interesting

For many players, playing one table is simply boring.  At least when you play live, you can talk to your table mates in between folds.  Online, you are just staring at a screen, twiddling your thumbs.  Sure, you can surf the internet, watch television, or do your taxes, but if you have that much time to concentrate on those things, you might as well not even play poker, since it sounds like it isn’t too exciting. Multi-tabling allows players to always be involved in a hand, to always have a decision to make.  It’s just more interesting for many people.  Besides, what better way to put your huge LCD monitor through its paces?

Remember, the more tables you play at once, the less you will be able to concentrate on a single game.  You won’t have as much time to process information and will have a harder time coming up with tricky plays.  You will need to constantly evaluate how multi-tabling affects your game and determine when adding another table hurts your win rate too much.  If you have to, move down a level when trying multi-tabling for the first time in order to acclimate yourself to your new way of playing.  Whatever you do, make sure you find the right balance between fun and profitability.

You could be posting your articles on the Poker Bankroll Blog. Read all about it here.

 
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