So, I virused my laptop. Kind of embarrassing; the license on my anti-virus software expired, and I was too lazy to renew it. So, inevitably, I got a virus. What’s worse, cultural anthropologists have identified my laptop as an early example of the Steampunk vogue, although that’s just because it’s old and crusty. Or, to put it another way, the CD drive is borked, which meant that after many, many years of searching, I finally found a way to make reinstalling Windows even more irritating than usual.
Sorry, needed to vent. Anyway, the upshot of all this was that when I finally got WIndows up and running again, I had a pretty messy laptop, with tons of installed programs that Windows didn’t recognise. I began to tidy this mess up, and the first folder I went for was Absolute Poker, and whaddya know? There was $70 just lying there, doing nothing! And now, here I am, 12 hours later, with an equally messy Windows Installation but a healthy profit in my Absolute roll.
I’ve been toying with the idea of returning to Absolute ever since the’ dust settled on the superuser scandal, but never got around to it. I probably haven’t played there for two years (which means the value of that $70 has rocketed in the interim!), principally because I hated the software, but it’s become a far more attractive prospect now that it’s reputation has been so publicly tarnished. And, coincidentally, today is the day that the new Absolute/Ultimate Bet network and software is rolled out. Lots of people on the site are complaining about the changes, but to my eyes it looks exactly the same as before – boxy, blue, and ugly.
Happily, the standard of tournament play is rock-bottom awful, at least at the limits that my measly bankroll allows me to play at. Put it this way – it’s bad enough to keep me away from the Badugi tables on Stars, and the standard of play has to be pretty damn poor to keep me away from the Badugi Goldmine. As for the software, if you can look beyond the boxiness, there’ splenty to recommend it. I’m particularly fond of the “Fold and Show” button, which is chronically overused by bad players who seem obsessed with giving away as much free information as possible. (I had a heads up battle with one player who would automatically minbet every street, and when raised, would fold and show their bluffs… I was so busy lauging that I ended up losing to them SAD FACE).
That aside, it’s now a fairly standard modern poker client; nothing’s massively broken, nothing’s particularly impressive. Game selection, OTOH, is massively varied. There’s good variant action, with a lot of busy Stud and Omaha ring games. Sadly, the NLHE is ENORMOUUSLY BROKEN, because of the effing Bad Beat Jackpot – it appears to be impossible to play NLHE ring on a standard table, because everybody’s playing in the larcenous Jackpot games, which get raked to buggery. Sod. That.
Tournament players are better served, with a nice selection of NLHE MTTs, and a blind structure that’s extremely friendly – the standard non-turbo seems to be 1500 chips, with 12 minute blinds, and the first hour goes 5/10, 10/20, 15/30, 20/40, 30/60. If anyone knows of a site with a gentler structure, please let me know where it is. STTs are also well spread; it’s not hard to find a NLHE game, and there’s plenty of Omaha games as well, and that’s where I’m currently spending my time.
So! Absolute’s alright. And oddly, today has been the first day in years where I’ve not seen someone claim that the site they’re playing on is rigged.
*edit* I lied – there are non Jackpot NLHE ring games. You just have to look bloody hard to find them. I should also mention the other upside of AP’s quest to lure players back; the ring games are deepstacked, with the max buy-in set at 200 BBs.