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I recently stumbled upon the step SNG concept through an article I read on a
Danish news website. Here a Danish SNG expert, Allan ‘Sifosis’ Bække, wrote some
good tips on winning plays to beat the SNG steps. After investigating the step
SNG system in more detail I decided to write a small review about it and include
some of Allan ‘Sifosis’ Bække’s tips on how to beat the SNG steps.
After reading about the step SNG concept I came to realize that it is very
similar to the cash table limit rush which I have mentioned in another
article. Typically there are 6 steps in step SNG systems with each successive
step having a higher buyin. You can buy in directly to any step you want and
then proceed to play a 10 person SNG. The top finishes (usually top 2 or 3
depending on the step and poker site you are playing on, see tables below for
more details) receive a ticket to the next step and lower finishes receive
tickets to play another SNG on the same or lower steps.
The similarity between the cash table limit rush and the step SNG system is
that you can start with a very low buyin and have a chance of winning big. The
things I like better when comparing the cash table limit rush to the step SNG
concept are for one that there’s no cash game play (I suck at this) and secondly
that you get another chance at the same or lower steps if you don’t win and
therefore potentially a lot more play for your initial buyin.
I have found the SNG step system on two poker sites so far (mind you I
haven’t spent a lot of time searching so I’m sure you will be able to find more
poker sites offering step SNG’s ) namely on Party Poker and Pokerstars. On Party
Poker you win 2000$ cash for a 1st place finish on the final step whereas on
Pokerstars you win a WSOP package worth 12500$.
The rake you pay for the Party Poker step SNG’s is reasonable compared to the
regular SNG rakes whereas on Poker Starts the rake is somewhat higher than the
regular SNG rake (see below for more info).
I have gathered together all the information you will need regarding Party
poker and Pokerstars SNG step structure, prize pool distribution and rake in the
two tables shown below.
Party poker step SNG structure
|
Step
|
Buyin/players
|
Prizes
|
Total
Prize pool/rake
|
|
1
|
3$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
|
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 1
Entry
to step 1
|
26$/4$
(0,4$
pr. buyin (13%))
|
|
2
|
10$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
7.place
|
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 1
Entry
to step 1
Entry
to step 1
|
89$/11$
(1,1$
pr. buyin (11%))
|
|
3
|
30$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
7.place
|
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
|
270$/30$
(3$
pr. buyin (10%))
|
|
4
|
70$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
|
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 3
|
630$/70$
(7$
pr. buyin (10%))
|
|
5
|
170$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
|
Entry
to step 6
Entry
to step 6
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 4
|
1540$/160$
(16$
pr. buyin (9,4%))
|
|
6
|
500$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
|
2000$
1000$
700$
500$
500$
|
4700$/300$
(30$
pr. buyin (6%))
|
The regular rake percentages for Party Poker SNG’s vary from 20-25% for low
buyin SNG’s (<10$), 10% for medium buyin SNG’s (<100$) and down to
0,2% for high buyin SNG’s (over 100$).
Pokerstars WSOP qualifier step SNG structure
|
Step
|
Buyin/players
|
Prizes
|
Total
Prize pool/rake
|
|
1
|
7,5$
or 500FPP
/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
|
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 1
1,5$
|
63$/12$
(1,2$
pr. buyin (16%))
|
|
2
|
27$
or 1750FPP
/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
|
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 2
Entry
to step 1
|
225,5$/44,5$
(4,45$
pr. buyin (16%))
|
|
3
|
82$
or 5125FPP
/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
|
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 3
|
676$/144$
(14,4$
pr. buyin (18%))
|
|
4
|
215$
or 13500FPP
/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
|
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 3
Entry
to step 2
|
1806$/344$
(34,4$
pr. buyin (16%))
|
|
5
|
700$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
|
Entry
to step 6
Entry
to step 6
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 5
Entry
to step 4
Entry
to step 4
|
6030$/970$
(97$
pr. buyin (14%))
|
|
6
|
2100$/10
|
1.
place
2.
place
3.
place
4.
place
5.
place
6.
place
|
12500$
1500$
1500$
1000$
1000$
500$
|
18000$/3000$
(300$
pr. buyin (14%))
|
At Pokerstars the regular rake percentages are similar to those at Partypoker
and vary from 20-25% for low buyin SNG’s (<10$), 10% for medium buyin SNG’s
(<100$) and down to 0,2% for high buyin SNG’s (over 100$).
As promised here are some tips from Allan ‘Sifosis’ bække on how to beat the
Pokerstars step SNG’s:
Steps 1-3
- Play tight aggressive; don’t get into trouble with marginal hands and play
your premium hands hard. Don’t be afraid to overbet the pot, there are plenty of
fish on these levels who will call you.
- Play tight on the bubbles if you have a small stack that is still larger
than 10BB.
- Start pushing with more marginal hands if you have less than 10BB but adjust
your pushing range to your position and the previous action on the table.
- If you have a big stack on the bubble put pressure on your opponents.
Steps 4-5
- The basic approach from level 1-3 still applies here.
- However, at these levels the quality of your opponents will increase,
therefore it is very important to identify the weaker players at your table and
play some hands against them. The chips you accumulate here will be their weight
worth in gold later in the SNG to put pressure on your other opponents.
- Select your tables carefully. Find out who plays the higher steps regularly
and try to avoid tables with many regulars.
Step 6
- Doubling up early is the key to winning step 6 especially if you choose a
table without too many regulars. In this case many of your opponents will be
money scared and thus easy to bully if you are the chip leader at the table. You
should play your opponents more than your cards on this level.
Good luck on the steps…let me know how you do:-)
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