Tournament vs Cash Game
Different formats require different strategies.
Poker tournaments and cash games are as different as marathon running and sprinting. Both test your poker skills, but the strategies, mental approaches, and even bankroll requirements differ dramatically.
Key Differences
Tournament vs Cash Comparison
| Aspect | Tournaments | Cash Games |
|---|---|---|
| Buy-in | Fixed (one entry) | Unlimited (rebuy anytime) |
| Chips | Non-cashable until finish | Direct dollar value |
| Blinds | Increase over time | Stay constant |
| Duration | Until eliminated or win | Leave anytime |
| Edge | ICM pressure matters | Pure chip EV |
| Variance | Higher (top-heavy payouts) | Lower (steady profit) |
Tournament Dynamics
Chip Value Changes
In tournaments, the value of chips changes based on stack size:
- First chip is worth more than your last chip
- Doubling up doesn't double your tournament equity
- Survival matters more as you approach pay jumps
Good to Know
Stages of a Tournament
Early Stage (Deep Stacks)
100+ big blinds. Play closer to cash game strategy. Speculative hands gain value.
Middle Stage (Antes Begin)
30-50 big blinds. Steal blinds more aggressively. Pot odds improve.
Bubble (Approaching Money)
Pressure on short stacks. Big stacks can bully. Play tighter with medium stacks.
Final Table
Pay jumps matter most. ICM dominates decisions. Avoid 50/50 flips.
Cash Game Dynamics
Every Chip Has Equal Value
Unlike tournaments:
- $100 in chips = $100 cash value always
- No ICM considerations
- Pure expected value calculations
- Take every +EV spot regardless of variance
Session vs. Long-Term
Strategy Insight
Strategy Differences
When Strategy Differs
| Situation | Tournament | Cash |
|---|---|---|
| 50/50 for all your chips | Often fold (ICM) | Take with slight edge |
| Short-stacked (10BB) | Push/fold mode | Rebuy and play normal |
| Against a fish | May avoid variance near bubble | Maximize every spot |
| Premium pair vs. shove | Consider ICM spot | Almost always call |
| Speculative hands early | Yes (implied odds) | Always (can reload) |
Bankroll Requirements
Minimum Bankroll Recommendations
| Format | Requirement | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Tournaments (MTT) | 100+ buy-ins | $10 tourneys = $1,000+ |
| Sit-n-Go (STT) | 50-100 buy-ins | $20 SnGs = $1,000+ |
| Cash 6-max | 30-50 buy-ins | $100 stakes = $3,000+ |
| Cash full-ring | 20-30 buy-ins | $200 stakes = $4,000+ |
Proper bankroll management prevents going broke during downswings
Warning
Which Is Right for You?
Choose Tournaments If...
- You love the thrill of a final table
- Set schedule works for you
- Comfortable with high variance
- Enjoy the mental challenge of adapting to blinds
- Dream of life-changing scores
Choose Cash If...
- Want to play on your own schedule
- Prefer steady income over big swings
- Like leaving whenever you want
- Enjoy deep-stacked poker consistently
- Building hourly win rate matters to you
Strategy Insight
Key Takeaways
- 1Tournament chips have diminishing marginal value; cash chips don't
- 2ICM pressure near bubbles and final tables changes tournament decisions
- 3Cash games allow pure EV calculations without survival concerns
- 4Tournaments require 100+ buy-ins; cash needs 30-50 buy-ins
- 5Tournament variance is much higher—expect long stretches without cashing