gundog wrote:I played my 1st Omaha Tourney Sat night, how the heck did I finish 9th, lost half my stack in one hand I had forgot straight dont count.
I think the game is a bit of a crap shoot IMHO, but I could be convinced otherwise with a good arguement for th defence.
10 players per table is BS a deck has 52 cards 40 are dealt to players preflop that is just under 80%of the playable cards, that leaves 12 cards to form a hand, It is pure luck until the number of players is reduced to 6, then I believe skill starts play a part of the role.
Should 888pl Omaha games have 6 max per table at the start ?
I think you are a little confused Gundog. Straights most certainly DO count, and the hand rankings are the same as they are in holdem.
Perhaps where you are mistaken is that in Omaha you can only use two of your four cards, but you MUST use two of your four cards.
So if the board runs 6 7 8 9 x and you have a 10 in your hand, you do NOT have a straight. Im guessing your situation might have been similar to this. It takes a little bit to get used to this, but its not a problem once you do.
I also think your statement regarding a crap shoot is prob due to a great number of players having very little experience with omaha before (think of the first NPL tournaments when 80% instead of 5% of people were complete beginners).
I think its been discussed on here before, but the difference between the best and worse hand in omaha is much smaller pre-flop than it is in holdem. e.g. in holdem you can be an 8-1 underdog preflop maximum, whereas in omaha this is reduced to about 2.5 or 3-1 (correct me if im wrong omaha players, garth, scott).
So its most definately a post-flop game, which is why you will often see more players to a flop than in a typical holdem game. I think with the game being pot-limit instead of no-limit that this requires more skill instead of less, as we dont have the old "all in" move to fall back on the majority of the time, and our fold equity is therefore reduced.
I personally think the addition of Omaha games is very exciting. A lot of us have played holdem now for a number of years, but are relatively new to omaha, and still have little idea what they are doing (this is me in a nutshell). I think this presents an opportunity to learn to get good at a new game, read some strategy, and ask the experts some questions. i know i will be.