Cash games and tournaments are fundamentally different formats. Understanding these differences shapes every strategic decision you make.
The Key Differences
In cash, every chip has fixed value. In tournaments, chip value changes based on the prize structure. This single difference drives all other strategic adjustments.
Stack Depth
Cash games typically use 100+ big blinds. Tournaments have varying stack depths from 10 to 200+ BB. This changes which hands are playable and how.
Risk vs Reward
In cash, you can rebuy. In tournaments, you’re out when you bust. This makes tournament players naturally more conservative near pay jumps.
Table Selection
Cash games allow table selection — you choose your opponents. Tournaments assign you a table. This makes table selection a massive edge in cash.
Which Format to Start With?
For beginners: tournaments teach discipline and short-stack play. Cash games teach deep-stack fundamentals. Both have value.
The Grind
Cash game success is measured in BB/100 (big blinds per 100 hands). Tournament success is measured in ROI (return on investment). Both require volume to be meaningful.
Adjustments When Switching
Moving from cash to tournaments: tighten up near the bubble, respect ICM, adjust to stack sizes.
Moving from tournaments to cash: widen ranges, use implied odds more, exploit deep stacks.
Session Length
Cash: play as long as you’re profitable and focused. Tournaments: you’re locked in until you bust or win.
Choose the format that matches your personality, schedule, and bankroll. Both can be profitable with the right approach.
Adapt your approach to your goal: learning, having fun, or generating consistent income.
Cash games reward consistency and discipline. Tournaments reward adaptation and risk management.
In both cases, the key is volume of play and constant review of your sessions.
