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1rd May 06
Bodog is a sports book and casino since 1995
and their poker room opened quite recently (Sep 2004). The poker room
has a nice lobby with a quick and easy overview. The software is fast,
got a nice look and feel plus good playability. Bodog Poker is not yet
a high player volume room and the ring games are currently concentrated
to No-Limit Hold'em at the micro limits. They are working independently
and are not part of a poker room network, as they are already an established
online casino and sports book making a big investment into online poker.
Real money player statistics - December 2005: 1300-1500 ring game players
during peak hours and 3000-3500 tournament players during peak hours.
Bodog Poker has enough traffic to be interesting
for most Texas Hold em players and the games appear to be
fast as far as I can tell although there are no hands/hour stats for the
tables. The other games offered have much less traffic on the other hand
so don?¡¥t expect to play Omaha or stud here. Nine-seat tables
are used for no- and pot limit games and ten-seat tables for fixed limit.
In addition to the poker room, bodog.com also operates a sportsbook and
a casino as well as an online magazine found under the 'lounge' tab. Bodog
doesn't have a lot of general poker content but they do have a newsletter
and a good deal of basic information. The promotions are very good, especially
if you (and friends that you refer) play for high stakes since the cash
bonuses typically have low percentages but high maximums. In addition
to the cash bonuses there are also special events and freerolls. Support
is available via email and phone and there is an adequate amount of online
support material such as FAQ's.
The MicroPower software is used by the poker rooms in the Power Poker
Network. The lobby looks good and you have a good overview in the typical
tabbed list view with an information panel on the right hand side. The
list can be sorted according to any of the column values and you have
most information available in the list. The is a semi-drop down main menu
where some of the entries work like buttons and other produce a sub menu.
This works well however and you have access to all the features collected
in one place here in a convenient way. You also have a higher level of
control than in most poker rooms: a selection betweenr.
This is good since it allows for the inclusion of quite a bit of functionality
and information without making the interface cluttered. The main menu
gives you access to some web information (a web reader is launched). The
account tools let you customize your settings, access the cashier functions,
change your info and request hand histories. Play Poker, not surprisingly,
brings you to the list of games. The window does have the
large bar at the top of the window but on the other hand you can drag
the window by clicking anywhere within it (except clickable elements such
as buttons of course). The arrangement of the buttons appears to differ
between the rooms that use this software but the functionality appears
to be rather constant.
If you select the button
you are given a further choice between single- and multi table tourneys.
Single table tournaments are all sit go and
you get most of the information you could ask for in the list and in the
information panel when you select a tournament. You register for sit go
tournaments by launching them and then sitting in at a free seat. The
tournament then starts when all seats are taken. You can see who is seated
and, if the tournament is going, the amounts of chips that they command.
Pay-outs are only displayed in percentages of the prize pool which is,
I think, a bit unnecessary: it would have been easy to also display the
amounts. For the multi-table tournaments you get an appropriate level
of information in the list and to register and get more info you have
to launch the tournament s lobby. The lobby could have contained
a great deal of more information such as blind levels, breaks and so on.
You can however see a list of tables, a list of players and a list of
players for the selected table. You can also watch a table by double clicking
it. You don?¡¥t launch a table by double clicking a player but
you do position the table list cursor at the table at which the player
sits. This is maybe even better than actually launching the tables.
The graphics are not great but they work and the controls are not bad
at all. The sound effects are good and focus passing is almost perfect
except that it shifts focus to table sometime before it?¡¥s
your turn to act. This becomes extremely irritating if you are sitting
out to do something else with your computer: the tables come flying from
time to time even though your are not participating in the game. The controls
are a bit small but they are so well designed that this is not a big issue
in any case. The slider is not as good as it could have been. You can
quickly position it be clicking in the interval but the type-in option
works very well with bet amounts updating dynamically in the buttons.
You can access the settings from a button in the top left hand corner
of the screen and you can select whether you want to view chat (you can
set levels), player notes or statistics. There are ad banners at the table
which I think is not a big problem really. They occupy the space where
the controls are and they disappear whenever any control needs to be displayed.
The MicroPower client is very good in my opinion although they should
work a little bit on the focus shifting between the tables. Usually poker
rooms fail here by not passing focus often enough but here it is done
too much.
Bodog Poker Review

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