|  | 
			
			
			
					
					
						
					
			
				
					
						
	Wow.  Even playing 10NL with a $1K roll is super-nitty, let alone 5NL.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by oskar I don 't think you can be too conservative with BR management. Spoons guide is excellent if you know you're going to play your best game, and you try to build up a bankroll  fairly quickly without too much risks. 
When you ask most players here what they actually do, I think you will find out that many stay at one level  for a long time, not because they are loosing, but just to withdraw some, pay bills and when they move up they likely have at least 50 buy-ins for the level .  
At micro limits you probably want to move up fairly quickly, and I think Spoons guide offers a close  to optimal risk-vs-reward factor. 
I got my BR up to $1k for the first time yesterday playing 5NL when I crossed the mark - I usually play 10NL, but I was a little tired, and I just wanted to play a little bit for fun. And I think those are the things you need to do. Drop  down when you're not playing your best, are tilted or play just for fun. 
 Fair enough if you withdraw regularly to pay bills etc, but in that case I would argue that for the purposes of being rolled for your stakes your real "underlying" roll - the money you have to play poker with - doesn't include those withdrawals in the first place.  But failing that, if you have beaten the lower limit over a reasonable sample (eg. 20K hands) and are reasonably confident in your game at that level, aren't you just dudding yourself by not moving up?
 
 Disclosure: my roll is about $660 at the moment and I'm playing 20NL, but I plan to go to 50NL as soon as I reach $1250.
 |