| Absolute: | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Absolute | 30% | ||
| Boss Media: | ||||
![]() | Poker Heaven | 30% | ||
![]() | Fortune Poker | 30% | ||
| CakePoker: | ||||
![]() | CakePoker | 33% | ||
| Cryptologic: | ||||
![]() | SunPoker | 30% | ||
![]() | BetSafe | 30% | ||
![]() | DTDPoker | 30% | ||
| Entraction: | ||||
| 24h Poker | 20-60% | |||
![]() | 110Bet | 30% | ||
![]() | FjordBet | 30% | ||
| Independent: | ||||
![]() | Betfair | 30-37% | ||
![]() | Full Tilt | 27% | ||
![]() | PKR.com | 30% | ||
| Merge Gaming: | ||||
| PokerNordica | 30% | |||
![]() | IronDuke | 30% | ||
| PokerNexus: | ||||
![]() | FatBet Poker | 50% | ||
| UltimateBet: | ||||
![]() | UltimateBet | 30% | ||
|
|
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| Game type: | |
|---|---|
| Table type: | |
| Limit: | |
| Tables: | |
| Hours a day: | |
| Rakeback: | % |

by Gamekill, 03.06.2008
1 - Los Angeles, California
L.A.
is now, has been, and will remain for quite some time the poker capital
of the world. There are two strong reasons why it has the very best
action in a wide variety of games. For one, there are millions and
millions of people there and they have lots of cash. There are tons
businesses of all kinds based in L.A. as well as a greater than average
number of people working in cash businesses and/or working for tips.
Next, there is California's rich history of poker. It's been popular
there since before California became a state and it boomed alongside
the gold rush back in the 19th century. Also, poker was first legalized
and deemed a game of skill by the powers that be in California way back
in 1911.
Also, let's not
deny it just because it's a stereotype, Asians love to gamble at poker
and L.A. has a huge Asian population. This is a hard combination of
factors to beat. It's easy to guess that Los Angeles will remain the
number one poker city in North America (as well as the entire world)
for many years to come.
2- Las Vegas, Nevada
Another
city with a rich history of poker is Las Vegas. While Vegas has always
been focused on fancy meals, shows, nightspots and house games, poker
has nevertheless been affixed somewhere within the fabric of the Las
Vegas experience. Vegas continues to host the biggest poker tournaments
in the world, and is also home to much of the poker that the general
public watches on television. So, Vegas will obviously play a big role
in the future of poker. It's home to the buzz as well as many of the
biggest pros and nicest rooms in the world.
3- San Francisco Bay Area, California
Let's
take our list a few hundred miles up the Pacific coast to San
Francisco, the city I've chosen third. The reasons are similar to the
reasons given for choosing L.A. The Bay Area has many rooms and a
strong California poker history as well as millions of people who
generally have a lot of disposable income. I see San Francisco becoming
a much more popular poker destination in the years to come than it is
today and ultimately this is why I've ranked it so high. I think the
poker playing public likely already sees San Francisco as a neat
alternative to L.A. and Vegas as a place to go and catch some action
while on a vacation and/or a poker trip. Although, they could probably
use a, bigger, better and more central casino/cardroom.
4- Seattle, Washington and Vancouver, British Columbia
I've
lumped these two cities together because they are relatively close
together and I consider them to be part of the same poker zone. Players
can come up from the American side to enjoy the tax benefits of
Canadian tournaments and Canadian players can head to the Seattle area
to catch solid cash game action. Seattle seems to have retained steady
limit poker action while no-limit dominates north of the border. Both
the Muckleshoot Casino near Seattle and the Riverrock Casino in
Vancouver are large, respectable casinos with above average poker
rooms, and looking ahead I think this shows promise that the game is
becoming more and more entrenched in the culture there.
5- Calgary, Alberta
This
is a bit of a dark horse entry on my list as Calgary really isn't that
big of a city (population is approximately 1 million) and it's
relatively far away from any major north American metropolises. Yet, I
assure you it does deserve mention. Poker north of the border has
lagged behind the United States for years but recently it's finally
gotten to be about as popular per capita as it is in the U.S.A. And
speaking per capita I would venture a guess that Calgary is likely the
most poker loaded city on the entire continent (with the possible
exception of the cities who's economy's are deeply linked to gambling,
i.e. Las Vegas, Atlantic City, Niagara Falls). They've got several
cardrooms all across town and pretty much the biggest action north of
Vegas and San Fran. Genuine middle limit action in limit holdem,
no-limit holdem and pot-limit omaha can be sought out every day and the
big bet games can sometimes escalate into the higher stakes ( i.e.
10-25-50 PLO with some stacks over $10 000).
Calgary is the
business centre of Alberta, Canada's most oil rich province, and
there's plenty of work there. Menial jobs pay more than double what
they do in more recessed regions. Also, Calgary is the Canadian city
with the deepest cultural connection to poker, as cowboys have been
playing it for years and years along the stampede trail up from Texas.
Those Who Didn't Make The Cut
There
are other cities that didn't make the list that perhaps deserve an
honourable mention. Atlantic City NJ has a spruced up image with the
construction of Borgata and it's brand new poker room. San Diego CA,
Minneapolis MN and Toronto ON all have solid action, day in and day
out. Montreal QC recently opened it's first legal poker room ever and
are apparently getting surprisingly good interest in no-limit holdem in
their giant classy casino there. Finally, Phoenix AR was the last to be
cut from my list, although I've never been there I've heard from
reputable sources that $40-80 limit games are the norm every day and
that games as high as $100-200 are sometimes held at peak times, and
they also spread no-limit.
What Does It Take?
So what does it take for a city to play a major role in the future of poker in North America? I think I've isolated the two key factors that need to be present and aplenty: 1- The city must have a strong economy where average citizen has both ample disposable income and enough free time to partake in a hobby as involving as poker. 2- The city must already own a sense of history with the game. Places where many people see themselves as poker players and have for a long time (perhaps even for generations in places such as California, Nevada or even Calgary), have a tendency to stay true to the game and spread the game properly. By this I mean building decent cardrooms with the appropriate amenities (food,drink, parking etc...), using the right rules, choosing proper equipment and hiring competent staff. In part is is their experience running cardrooms that breeds unequaled competence but above all that there's a bigger factor at work that really shines through, a passion for the game.
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