Some additions to benny the cunt's good advice: (u say u no expert benny the cunt?? u clearly know alot more than 90% of the players out there playing these games

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Other than 'Play Tight', I would say to also play hands where you have no tough decisions post flop. In position suited aces/connectors can be played early and small/medium pairs (as benny the cunt said), even to a raise - if you dont flop a set/flush/straight then instafold... But when you do, there are usually players willing to stack off with AJ on a J high board (AJo should almost always be folded preflop in a SnG) or with the 2nd nut flush and you are getting implied odds to play them.
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You want to avoid easily dominated hands like AT or K9s... they are just trouble, even if you only need to call after a limp just fold them. This alone will increase your ROI significantly. ***
I think benny the cunt is talking about the end game (or close to it) being purely push/fold. You cant really play that way from hand #1. but... ALMOST NEVER LIMP OR CALL PREFLOP. This is a huge leak in most SnGs. Either open raise, reraise or fold. As I said above, call IN POSITION (and early on) with pairs or (preferably high) suited Aces/connectors, but only continue if you flop a set/flush/straight. (or a huge draw)
Early on, you can also play these hands from EP but you still need to raise them, and fold to a 3bet.
It also depends whether you are playing turbos or not. You cant wait for QQ+, AK in turbos. Also if you are too tight, you will get no or very little action when you do raise preflop... Certainly if I see a player raise and his stats are something like 7% VP$IP and 5% PFR, even only over this game, he aint gettin much action from me without a very big hand.
Another tip, is when not involved in hands, if your site has player search, use it on your opponents and mark the multi-tablers, these players will be much tighter (usually) than the others, and will also almost always give up on the flop if they dont hit... can be very valuable information.
Also, forget about "Playing to win" or "Playing to cash" or whatever, like you might in a MTT. You want to
get to the bubble (ideally not as the short stack) and then make positive
tournament equity decisions. For example, on the bubble you are facing a push and you have AQo. Now AQ might be ahead of most of your opponents range, but it should be mucked like 72o. As benny the cunt mentioned, you often have better equity (in the tournament) by folding.
It is an odd situation where sometimes +ve chip EV decisions can actually be -ve tournament EV decisions.
So get to the bubble, even if you need to fold some strong hands to do so (many players bust in the mid game on PPs TT-77, fold them!), as this is where most mistakes are made. And the other wierd thing here is that ANY mistake by an opponent makes you money, over time.
It will usually be push fold poker here (as benny the cunt also mentions), and you usually need JJ+ (no AK) to call a push, even from the blinds, but can push quite wide. If your opponents are too loose in calling, sure you will lose a 70/30 or flip now and then, but over time you will make far more than you lose. And if your opponents push too tight - you also make money

The reason you can push wide, is beacause alot of players know they need premium hands to call, and most of the time they dont have them, and usually at this stage just the blinds is a significant addition to your stack (especially since the others will most often be taking
your blinds)
SnG's are games that make money
over time, and you need to make decisions which will yield the greatest return
over time, not neccessarily in that particular hand/game.
I would recommend you download a program called SnG Wizard. It imports your hands and analyses whether in any given situation your best move is to push, call or fold. And you'd sometimes be surprised (like above i said fold AK to a push unless its a micro stack pushing) at the advice. It also has a module, where it creates random bubble situations and asks you push or fold? then tells you what the mathematically correct play is (and why), so it acts like a trainer of sorts for these situations. And it has a 30 day trial period (and integrates seamlessly into HEM if you use it)
sitandgoplanet.com also has lots of articles worth a read...
If you are serious about these games, you must understand ICM. Even if you dont plan to use it, many of your opponents will, so it will afford you insights into their game.
Also, given how few hands you actually play for most of the game, open up atleast 2 games, otherwise they are boring as...
SnG's can be great games for your BR. And unlike most poker, when you get to 4 or less players (in a SnG that pays 3) and effective stacks are around 10BB or less, there
IS a mathematically best play, and turning math into money is great!
GL!
