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Review Of PDC Poker

PDCPoker initial deposit bonus is one of the better deposit bonus you will find on the internet. In fact PDCPoker offers an initial deposit bonus of 100% up to $600. The traffic at PDCPoker is small compared to many online poker rooms. However, it is starting to pick up and you can now find some higher stake games during peak hours. The competition at PDCPoker is considered by many poker players to be below average, even at the higher stake games, so if you are a solid player and want to increase your profit from what you can make at the bigger poker rooms, PDC Poker would be a great place to start. In addition, the software at PDCPoker is also player friendly and the fact that PDCPoker offers live chat support gives them an edge over most other online poker rooms.

Major PDCPoker Promotions:

Royal Flush Bonus – Win a bonus of 100 times the big blind by making a royal flush using both hole cards at any hold’em ring game.

New Depositors Freerolls – You receive 14 days of free seats in the $500 daily new depositor’s freerolls at PDCPoker.

PDCPoker Royalty Loyalty Program – Make your way up the various loyalty tiers at PDCPoker to earn some impressive benefits.

Refer-a-Friend – You receive $25 and you and your friend battle it out in a heads up match for a free $50.

As I mentioned, the traffic at PDCPoker is small compared to other online poker rooms. However, you will always find a game at PDCPoker. The fact that US players are allowed at the site is a good indicator that the traffic will grow in the future.

PDCPoker, unlike many online poker rooms, does offer a variety of less popular poker variations including HORSE, razz, 5 card stud, 5 card draw, triple draw, 7 card stud and badugi.

PDCPoker does offer the poker player many small buy-in tournaments on their tourney schedule. Most of the tournaments at PDCPoker buy-ins below $20 and often these tournaments are rebuy or bounty tournaments.

In addition, PDCPoker is known to offer many sit and go tournaments which are popular with many poker players. Usually the sit and go tournaments at PDCPoker average around $30 for regular tourneys and up to over $100 for heads up or double or nothing variations.

As mentioned, the competition at PDCPoker is still fairly soft relative to the larger online poker rooms. However, the Merge network, which PDCPoker is on, is still relatively new and they are just moving away from their aggressive freeroll approach to attract players. Thus, the poker player will find the low limit games to be very loose with very high pre-flop percentages.

As for the Merge network software that PDCPoker runs on, it is very solid with smooth game play and a lot of neat features. At some tables you can “deal it twice” and you are also given the option to “rabbit hunt” if you win the pot before the showdown. In addition, there is also a casino section attached to the software where you can try your luck at roulette, blackjack, video poker, etc.

As for support, PDCPoker offers both email support and live chat support. Live chat support is a plus since many online poker rooms do not offer this feature!

Deposits and withdraws at PDCPoker can be made by Visa, Click2Pay, ECO, Neteller, Moneybookers, eWalletXpress, PIC-Club, Entropay, ClickandBuy, paysafecard and echeck (great for US players!). The minimum deposit at PDCPoker is $10 for most options and the minimum withdrawal at PDCPoker is $50

Ten Thousand Years of Poker History.

Contrarily to the popular believe that the game of poker began in the 19th century in the US the roots of the game go much further in history and originate from the 10th century AD in China during the emperor Mu-Tsung ruling. Although at the time it was played with dominos, not cards, the principles, rules and strategies of the game were very similar to the modern day poker. It is believed that the emperor himself enjoyed playing this domino game with his wife and the court officials. This was the start of the poker history.

The game of what will be known as poker in the future travelled through times and continents to Egypt, India and Persia where it became known in the 12th-13th centuries as “Ganjifa”, which can be translated as “The Treasure Cards”. Such cards were made of very thin pieces of rare wood or even ivory and were only affordable to the very rich. The game reached Europe in the 16th century and became very popular first in Italy and Spain known as “Primero”, then in France named “Poque” and in Germany called “Pochen”. It was Europe that introduced suits to cards from the Italian tarot cards.

When French colonials moved to Canada at the start of the 18th century they took their “Poque” with them. It then travelled further south to the New Orleans and spread at first all around Louisiana where it was played in the famous floating saloons and than later all over the country. One of the earliest contemporary mentions of poker happened in J Hildreth book “The Dragoon Campaigns to the Rocky Mountains” in 1836. The game of the time seemed to be a 20 card deck variation played with Aces, Kings, Queens, Jacks and Tens which were divided between the players to make the best hand, there were no communal cards.
Jonathan Green described poker at the as the “cheating game” in his book “An Exposure of the Arts and Miseries of Gambling” and then later in his “Reformed Gambler” book. In 1857 Allen Dowling in his guide to New York City described 20 cards poker “one of the most dangerous pitfalls to be found in the city”. However during this time the 52 cards deck games started to increase their popularity and during the Wild West period and especially during the Civil War poker saloons could be found in every town in the US from the east to the west coast.
The middle of the 19th century saw introduction of new variation of poker games such as Stud, a cowboy invention from Ohio and Indiana, 5 Card Draw, which began during the Civil War period Although winning poker hands were not as we know them today. The 1864 edition of The American Hoyle gives the following winning hands rank “one pair, two pairs, straight sequence or rotation, triplets, flush, full house, fours.” It adds “When a straight and a flush come together in one hand, it outranks a full” but not fours.

Hi-Lo poker games, where a player can make a winning hand through getting wither the highest or the lowest hand began in 1903 and became most popular in the thirties and forties of the 20th century.

The beginning of the 20th century saw the birth of the Texas Holdem which became the Poker game for many years to come. Originated in Texas it stayed a mainly a local variation of poker unknown to the rest of the world until the 1960s. Poker legend Crandell Addington who first played it in 1959 said “They didn’t call it Texas hold ’em at the time, they just called it hold ’em.… I thought then that if it were to catch on, it would become the game. Draw poker, you bet only twice; hold ’em, you bet four times. That meant you could play strategically. This was more of a thinking man’s game.” And how right he was!

It took a few years for Texas Holdem to establish its grounds and become The Poker Game. For a few years Golden Nugget Casino was the only casino in the whole Las Vegas to offer Texas Holdem games. But those were the days before poker tournaments began. 1970 was the first year of World Series of Poker, WSOP, set up by Benny and Jack Binion in their Horseshoe Casino. Texas Holden entered the centre stage for the first time. Although the first World Series of Poker did not attract a huge number of players, only 6 players took part in the first Series, it was the figures like Doyle Brunson, Jonny Moss and especially Amarillo Slim, who won the bracelet in the third Series, that drew the world’s attention to Texas Holdem. From then on poker and especially Texas Holdem went from strength to strength.

2003 became the start of the new Golden Era for poker when an unknown at the time armature player Chris Moneymaker won his WSOP bracelet and $2.500.000 top prize. This victory changed the world of poker forever. Not only Chris was an extremely charismatic ordinary guy who played poker as a hobby, he was the first Champion to qualify to WSOP through exclusive online poker promotions. Popularity on online poker rooms hit through the roof that year and for many years come. Chris showed the ordinary players in every part of the globe that the dream of the top poker prize was within their reach. No one needs to pay the $10.000 buy-in any more to become the champion in the most prestigious live poker events and win millions of dollars as online poker rooms are willing to give the tickets to the players.

It looks like the popularity of online poker is going from strength to strength. This year’s WSOP registration numbers are higher than the year before despite doom and gloom forecasts from some analytics after the Black Friday. Online poker rooms offer players a huge number of satellites to qualify to live poker events, generous deposit bonuses and many other online poker promotions. Who knows it maybe your turn next to make a history and become the next WSOP champion?