kraada wrote:There was a function added to show EV using ICM, but it wasn't working right and I'm not sure it's even still included to be honest.
Yes some ICM calculations were included (the orange line) but Alon Albert took them out because they weren't working properly.
Also when your opponent is all in and you have him covered, the pot (obviously) counts even if you're not all in. All that is needed is that 1 player is all in and as further players become all in, they are part of a different pot.
1p0kerboy wrote:Wait, so this thing doesn't use the Independent Chip Model (ICM) for tournaments?
Whoever said cEV is closer to $EV in STTs than MTTs couldn't be more wrong. The payout structures in SNGs create a higher bubble factor throughout than in MTTs. For more on this please read Kill Everyone by Lee Nelson.
That whoever was me and since I recognise your screen name, I'm pretty sure you are more knowledgeable about poker theory than I am since I'm a lazy nitty noob donkey with a chip and a chair (half a brain too but the wrong half!). I will read "Kill Everyone" since you seem to recommend it.
Your arguments sound quite intuitive too.
BUT
1- How off will you readings be?
There may be a higher ITM bubble factor in SNGs than MTTs but there's no denying that there's a higher correlation between the amount of chips won and the amount of money won in an SNG than in an MTT. In an SNG you can triple up and have a third of the chips in play. This would never happens in an MTT. So cEV calculations may be imperfect (it does not accurately show situational circumstances such as bubble factors) but it can act as a useful guide. It simply can't be in MTTs, you don't even get a rough idea.
If you could magically double up in mid SNG, I can guarantee you would see the results show in terms of dollars. Sure you'll get those bubble situations but on the whole you'll do well. This is NEVER the case in MTTs.
Bubble situations in SNGs may be important but how much divergence will you find between ICM and cEV given the fact that you are likely to experience as many positive (lucky) situations as negative (unlucky) situations. This occurs because of the number of bubbles you are likely to see as a regular SNG player. This just can't be said of MTTs. You can get screwed over all your life in crucial MTT situations but I've never seen a player who's bubbled all their SNGs because of bad bubble luck.
2- About the importance of an ICM type of reading in MTTs compared to SNGs:
Like I said above bubble factors are likely to go in your favour and against you so in the long run they are likely to equal themselves out. I do understand that the point of having statistical tools is that they can tell you what happens with a higher degree of precision than that and can even be used to see shorter term trends too but cEV is likely to get things somewhere close because 1- it doesn't take long for things to equal out over time (the number of bubbles experienced in higher) and 2- the payout in SNGs is never a huge multiple of your buy-in whereas in MTTs they are (there are 2 bubbles in MTTs), so any divergence is not likely to be a massive one.
I have to tell you some bad beat stories to make my point so bear with me a second. How do you think an elaborate ICM reading would have behaved when I lost KK against TT in the biggest final table I ever made in a pot that would have made me the tournament chip leader? How about that bogey $11 tournament (I will wear black for the rest of my life on the 8th of June) where I lost 3 "all in" hands dominating my opponent at the final 2 tables and where in each instance I would have been (or comforted my place as) the tournament chipleader? I stood to make 100, 200 or maybe 400 times my buy-in even, depending on where I had finished should I have won (In the end I finished 10th). Since I refuse to think I'm the unluckiest player on Earth (maybe just to reassure myself and put the gun down), this must happen to quite a few people. I sometimes watch replays of the Sunday Million and I see some very very very expensive beats!! Much more expensive than the biggest string of bubble beats you'll ever see in SNGs.
Are you to tell me that because of higher bubble factors in SNGs (as I understand, this is the case because you are always closer to the bubble in an SNG that you are in an MTT at any given point), those would be more significant than those crucial beats at the final table or final 2 tables of an MTT? Those payouts are MASSIVE relative to the buy-in whereas in SNGs, you're really trying to double or triple your money.
I don't know I've got to think about it further but it seems to me that in MTTs there are some key moments that change everything. In SNGs those key moments are much less significant and get lost in the multitude of tournaments a regular SNG player engages in.
3- How useful is your luck?
This isn't specifically related to this discussion but related to luck in tournaments. It occurs to me that if you have a big stack in an SNG, it's much easier to win than if you have a big stack in an MTT, perhaps partly because the payout structure is much simpler.
If you are the chipleader at your SNG table you will remain so until you lose chips or someone wins some. In MTTs you can lose your chipleader status when you are moved to another table. This can affect your ability to boss the table. Also you can instantly get into a situation where people can have you covered without any chips changing hands (hence putting your tournament life at risk). This wouldn't happen in an SNG.
Also closing stages of an MTT seem a lot trickier than closing stages of an SNG where moves rather appear obvious when you have a big stack. That is to say, give a donkey a commanding chiplead in an SNG and he probably won't fail. Give a big stack to the same donkey in an MTT and he's no closer to the win as he will have to find creative plays, not simply ICM dictated ones.