Rampage Poker
Spin-ups have long been a part of online poker; players take shots at higher levels and every player dreams of spinning their bankroll up to six-figures, but the sad fact of the matter is – not everyone can be that lucky. Taking shots can sometimes be a little risky, and more than a few budding poker stars have gone broke playing above their bankroll or by sitting at a table with their entire roll in front of them. Indeed some might go so far as to call this gambling…
Rampage Poker Read now. First Deposit/Welcome Bonus can only be claimed once every 72 hours across all Casinos. This offer is only available for specific players that have been selected by RoyalBet. If you have arrived on this page not via the designated offer via RoyalBet you will not be eligible Rampage Poker. His bio states: 'Hey guys, Ethan (Rampage) here. Just an up-and-coming Poker Youtuber hoping to make some entertaining videos and have ya'll learn from my mistakes. Hope you guys enjoy!'
While playing within your bankroll at the micro-stakes levels (anything $0.25/$0.50 and under) can occasionally be a bit of a grind, sometimes living a bit dangerously is fun and gambling like anything else (except perhaps crack cocaine usage) is fine in moderation. In fact, what if I told you there was a way to build yourself a sizable online bankroll without risking your entire net worth. A way that enabled you to play at decent stakes online without having to pay in thousands of dollars onto an internet poker account. How, I here you ask? By going on the rampage…
'Rampaging' is a growing trend amongst online players who want to play at stakes where they can win decent money without necessarily having the bankroll behind them. The more traditional early form of rampaging involved sitting down at a table with your entire online bankroll, or at least the entirety of the roll sitting in your online account. Needless to say, this is a very 'boom or bust' approach that has seen more than a few people chew through their online roll with nothing but an empty poker account to show for it. No, the thinking man's rampage is where it's at these days.
The ethos behind modern rampaging stems from the short-stack approach to the game; buying in for the minimum at a level like $0.10/$0.25 for $5, only playing premium hands and shipping most of the money in either pre-flop or on the flop, doubling-up and then leaving the table. Now while your online short-stacking grinder will do this repeatedly over several tables at once and tend to stick to the same levels, your discerning rampager must take a different approach.
Normally, to play at the $1/$2 tables you need a bankroll of at least $4,000, where a single buy-in is $200 or around 5% of your roll. At the $0.10/$0.25 levels then, your bankroll needs to be around $500. But (and this is where rampaging really comes into its own) while you are short-stack rampaging you are buying in for the minimum so your bankroll can be that much smaller – a short-stacked rampager can have a bankroll of $50 to play in a $0.10/$0.25 game and still only be buying in for 5% of their roll.
Rampaging works best at the six-max tables and lends itself just as well to Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) as it does to No Limit Texas Hold 'Em (NLHE). In fact, poker author Rolf Slotboom discusses an excellent way to short-stack the PLO tables that lends itself particularly well to rampaging in his book 'Secrets of Professional Pot-Limit Omaha', which is definitely worth a read if you are looking to improve your online PLO game and increase your aggression factor.
Controlled aggression is an essential part of all good poker player's games; usually the more aggressive the player, the better the results. However, in the modern online game everyone is aggressive and it is this fact that the rampaging player will be using to their advantage:
Preparation is the key to success here – you are looking for a table (or tables) with a high average pot but with a low 'players per flop percentage'. Scan through the available tables (or use software like Table Tracker or SpadeIt that can be programmed to search for specific players or tables) until you see one that matches your requirements, then open it up and study how the game is playing out.
A table with large pots and less players per flop generally means that there are fewer calling stations on the table and one or two aggressive players who are committing quite a bit of money to the pots, usually through a combination of pre-flop raises and re–raises – which is just what you want. The more players who see a flop increases the amount of variance present in the game; the harder it is to get your hand heads-up or three way, the more likely it is that your big hands will get cracked. By picking a table with aggressive players (especially those who like to raise and re-raise to isolate pre-flop) you stand a better chance of taking your hand heads-up, where your penchant for picking strong starting hands provides you with an edge over the starting hand ranges of a good LAG (loose-aggressive) player.
You will be buying in for the minimum (although you could stretch to double the minimum i.e. $10 in a $0.10/$0.25 game if you want a bit more play) and looking to sit with a strong aggressive player to your left (yes, you want them to have position on you).
Patience is the key here; you are waiting for fairly decent hands. In Hold 'Em you will be playing the big Pocket Pairs (Aces down to Tens) and big Aces (suited or unsuited) down to Ace Queen. You can mix this up in late position by playing pairs down to Sevens, suited Aces down to Ace Ten and unsuited Aces down to Ace Jack.
Wsop Rampage Poker
In PLO, hands like double-suited Aces or Kings where all four cards work well together and double-suited run-down hands are what you are looking for. When you find a hand that you like you usually just want to call knowing the aggressive player will raise and get called in a couple of spots so you can re-raise all-in. Obviously you need to mix this up with some Button raises and re-raises when you have the goods as well so you don't become too predictable. When playing Hold 'Em this strategy differs slightly from PLO; it is usually better to be the raiser to reduce the number of players who see the flop.
Hopefully the obliging LAG should re-raise giving you some protection and taking the hand heads-up so you are getting around 3-1 on your money while being anywhere around an 80/20 to 60/40 favourite in the hand. Obviously this is not an exact science and the key to success is picking your spots carefully. Occasionally you'll be against two other players in the pot and while your win percentage may drop here you are still getting a pretty good return on your money for taking a favourable gamble. The trick is not to get too greedy, as soon as you have doubled up and have enough to buy in for the minimum for the next level you leave the table and jump up stakes. Rampaging differs from short-stacking in the fact that you are consistently moving up levels while only risking around 5% of your roll.
Of course, you can experiment with this strategy a little if you find a level you are comfortable playing at and wish to stick around in a particular game for a while. However, remember the whole point of rampaging is to move UP the stakes.
The best part about this approach is the fact you are risking a little to win a lot in a short space of time, while still using some semblance of bankroll management: While you are effectively playing higher than your roll allows you should still only be risking around 5% of your total net worth. The best way to ensure success is to give yourself a total you are happy reaching and then calling it quits and banking the money. If, at any point throughout the rampage you have reached a point where you are sitting with an amount in front of you that is more than 10% of your roll (or more than your entire bankroll if you are that lucky) then take the money and run.
While you won't make many friends doing this (short-stackers are universally hated and despised) there are no friends at the poker tables anyway and the internet in particular allows you to indulge in some behaviour that just wouldn't run in a live game.
Be warned however, that this approach can stunt your poker game if relied upon too heavily. If done properly it's a great way of building a bankroll that enables you to play at decent stakes with minimum risk. If it works, it can see you spin up an initial $50 deposit to a couple of thousand, enabling you to play the $0.50/$1 properly while occasionally attempting to take shots and enjoy the odd rampage at the higher levels, if it doesn't work you've lost $5. Show me a downside…
Tags
Cash GamesIntermediate strategyRelated Room
Full Tilt
Table Of Contents
On Sunday night, the 2020 World Series of Poker (WSOP) Event #26: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Grande Finale attracted 1,677 players who rebought 825 times. The 2,502-entry field meant a $1,125,900 prize pool was created, and after 12 hours of play it was 22-year-old Ethan 'RampageP' Yau capturing the bracelet and $164,493.99 first-place prize.
Yau, who streamed the victory on YouTube to thousands of viewers under his Rampage Poker moniker, is a self-described $1-$3 no-limit hold’em player who often loses. According to HendonMob, he has just $2,180 in tournament earnings from a pair of small cashes at Encore Boston Harbor.
While he may not be the most experienced player, he can now say he’s a World Series of Poker gold bracelet winner in his first-ever WSOP-related cash. Yau was slated to check out of his New Jersey AirBnB five hours, but one of the first things he did after the victory was send a message asking for a one-day extension. He also wondered how he was going to break the news to his mother, who he didn't inform about his trip to New Jersey in order to play the WSOP online series.
'That you guys. My phone is blowing up,' Yau said before closing his stream. 'Thank you so much for watching.'
2020 WSOP Online Event #26 Final Table Results
Place | Player | Prize |
---|---|---|
1 | Ethan 'RampageP' Yau | $164,494 |
2 | Brian “LakersGTD” Patrick | $101,669 |
3 | Mohammad “Tmomoney” Mufti | $74,647 |
4 | Blake “shampainpopn” Whittington | $55,282 |
5 | David “reallytight” Kim | $41,321 |
6 | Jason “TATTOOMONEY” Scott | $31,075 |
7 | Matt “OMG_Obama” Iles | $23,531 |
8 | Joon “jykpoker” Kim | $18,014 |
9 | Michael “Mike91680” Guzzardi | $13,961 |
After “WinCiry” bubbled the tournament in 372nd place the march to the final table began. Among those to make deep runs but come up short were Nick “samadhi” Binger (214th - $1,013.31), Chris “Robotbob47” Moorman (153rd - $1,351.08), Guy “PhilLaak” Dunlap (118th - $1,463.67), Daniel “DNegs” Negreanu (92nd - $1,576.26), Eric “circleball” Baldwin (68th - $2,026.62), Mark “Pegasus” Smith (39th - $3,490.29), and Brandon “Horus” Eisen (11th - $10,921.23).
Mohammad “Tmomoney” Mufti began the final table as the chip leader with Yau hot on his heels. Before too long, Yau vaulted into the lead after scoring a double elimination when his ace-eight suited hit a runner-runner flush all in preflop against Michael “Mike91680” Guzzardi and Event #7 champ Joon “jykpoker” Kim, who had kings and ace-king respectively.
Mufti then earned a knockout of his own when his ace-four held against the king-queen of Matt “OMG_Obama” Iles, who bowed out in seventh place. Following him out the door was Jason “TATTOOMONEY” Scott, who shoved the button with eight-six only to run into Blake “shampainpopn” Whittington’s pocket tens.
Poker Vlogs Youtube
Five-handed play lasted for a while beforeDavid “reallytight” Kim flopped a straight and got it in only to see Yau runner-runner a diamond flush. Whittington then ran jack-ten suited smack dab into Yau’s pocket aces to fall in fourth, while Brian “LakersGTD” Patrick won a flip with ace-queen against Mufti’s nines to send the latter out in third.
Yau began heads-up play with 22.8 million to Patrick’s 14.5 million, and it didn’t take long before the two flipped for it. Patrick had ace-eight, Yau two reds fours, and the board ran out clean to eliminate Patrick in second place and send the bracelet to Yau.
2020 Online WSOP Bracelet Winners
Date | Tournament | Entries | Prize Pool | Winner | Prize |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
7/1/20 | Event #1: $500 NLH Kick-Off | 1,715 | $771,750 | Jonathan 'Art.Vandelay' Dokler | $130,426 |
7/2/20 | Event #2: $1,000 NLH Deepstack 8-Max | 919 | $873,050 | Louis 'PokeThese' Lynch | $168,586 |
7/3/20 | Event #3: $400 NLH | 2,091 | $752,760 | Robert 'bustinballs' Kuhn | $115,850 |
7/4/20 | Event #4: $500 NLH Super Turbo | 1,179 | $530,550 | Matt 'Bodeyster' Bode | $97,091 |
7/5/20 | Event #5: $1,000 NLH Freezeout | 854 | $811,300 | Allen 'Acnyc718' Chang | $161,286 |
7/6/20 | Event #6: $600 PLO8 6-Handed | 883 | $449,820 | Nathan 'surfbum' Gamble | $89,424 |
7/7/20 | Event #7: $800 NLH Knockout Deepstack | 989 | $731,660 | Joon “jykpoker” Kim | $103,127 |
7/8/20 | Event #8: $500 NLH Freezeout | 1,479 | $665,550 | Alan 'GladiusIII' Goehring | $119,400 |
7/9/20 | Event #9: $1,000 NLH 6-Max | 1,026 | $974,700 | Ron 'MacDaddy15' McMillen | $188,214 |
7/10/20 | Event #10: $600 NLH MonsterStack | 2,074 | $1,119,960 | Ryan 'Im.Sorry' Torgerson | $172,361 |
7/11/20 | Event #11: $500 NLH Turbo Deepstack 6-Max | 1,691 | $760,950 | Raman “Acrogum” Afanasenka | $128,601 |
7/12/20 | Event #12: $500 The BIG 500 No-Limit Hold'em | 2,427 | $1,092,150 | Ryan 'joeyisamush' Depaulo | $159,563 |
7/13/20 | Event #13: $1,500 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller Freezeout | 649 | $924,825 | Michael “miguelfiesta” Lech | $164,249 |
7/14/20 | Event #14: $3,200 No-Limit Hold'em High Roller | 496 | $1,507,840 | Joe 'fanofdapoker' McKeehen | $352,985 |
7/15/20 | Event #15: $1,000 Pot-Limit Omaha | 663 | $629,850 | Guy 'PhilLaak' Dunlap | $133,780 |
7/16/20 | Event #16: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Turbo | 1,528 | $687,600 | Terrell “Heezahustla” Cheatham | $116,204 |
7/17/20 | Event #17: $777 No-Limit Hold'em | 1,382 | $967,400 | Pat 'IchiiKawawa' Lyons | $173,551 |
7/18/20 | Event #18: $1,000 No-Limit Hold'em Turbo DeepStack | 987 | $937,650 | Scott 'BudLightLime' Hempel | $181,060 |
7/19/20 | Event #19: $400 No-Limit Hold'em | 2,545 | $916,200 | Kenny 'Chopuh' Huynh | $133,857 |
7/20/20 | Event #20: $500 Pot-Limit Omaha 6-Handed | 1,137 | $511,650 | Kevin 'therealkg' Gerhart | $97,572 |
7/21/20 | Event #21: $777 No-Limit Hold'em 6-Handed | 1,361 | $952,700 | Tony 'Panoramic' Dunst | $168,342 |
7/22/20 | Event #22: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Turbo Deepstack | 1,579 | $710,550 | Allan “Treeoflife” Cheung | $120,083 |
7/23/20 | Event #23: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Knockout | 1,452 | $667,920 | Raymond “avant9201” Avant | $93,776 |
7/24/20 | Event #24: $400 No-Limit Hold'em 8-Handed | 2,408 | $866,880 | Nick “samadhi” Binger | $133,413 |
7/25/20 | Event #25: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Summer Saver | 2,155 | $969,750 | Nicholas “mrfinalt” Kiley | $149,245 |
7/26/20 | Event #26: $500 No-Limit Hold'em Grande Finale | 2,502 | $1,125,900 | Ethan 'RampageP' Yau | $164,494 |
What's Coming Up?
The next tournament on the schedule – Event #27: $400 No-Limit Hold’em Freezeout – will take place at 3 p.m. PDT on Monday. The PokerNews Live Reporting Team will once again be reporting all the action, so be sure to tune in then to see who captures the next 2020 WSOP bracelet!
The first step in getting set up to play on WSOP.com is to download the client. You can do so for both mobile (Android and iOS) and desktop (Windows 7 or higher and Mac OS X 10.6.8).
Rampage Poker Twitter
To get the correct version of the client, use the links below:
Rampage Poker Vlog
Tags
WSOPWorld Series of PokerTournament ResultsOnline tournament resultsOnline PokerRelated Tournaments
World Series of Poker