From Feb 1st to Feb 21st the APL is coming to GG Poker with ¥80,000,000 in Guarantees from 16 Trophy Events and heaps of side events! APL (Australia Poker League) has created a Poker platform that which is free to join and free to play and never consists of any money and /or commodity to play. APL created this site for anyone in the world to come and join for free and play in daily and weekly tournaments which can win the tickets into future tournaments. This app is for all people to join and enjoy playing poker at no cost for membership and no cost for tournaments to play.

30 Million GTD Gold Event 2020.4.26 ($30,000 in-app value, Buy-in 150K Gold) APL Online Main Event Ticket to first 200 entries. Satellite Every Day (4/204/26). Let's hear from Jackie Glazier your APL Ambassador about tomorrow's series of events! Download the PlayAPL app NOW for the FULL schedule & blind structures or visit #APLPT #APL #AussiePoker #AustralianPokerLeague #JackstarSHR. The APL is the world's largest free-to-play poker league, home to nearly 750,000 members throughout.

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About Hold’em Tournaments

A large number of players participate in tournaments, playing simultaneously with the same amount of chips.
There are two tournament formats: Sit and Go and Multi Tournament (MTT).
In Sit and Go format, players compete for the pot on one table (up to 10 players).
In Multi Tournament format, players play simultaneously on two or more tables. Players who lose out of the game are replaced by players from other tables, and the final winner is determined at the last remaining table.
Players who lose all their chips drop out of the tournament, and tournament ranking is determined by the order in which players drop out.
The size of the blind increases as the tournament progresses. Once one player (or a designated number of players) holds all of the chips available, the tournament ends.
At the end of the tournament, prize money is awarded according to ranking.

Tournament Terms

Guaranteed
The amount of award money paid out by the tournament is guaranteed. Unlike ordinary tournaments, players are guaranteed a certain amount of prize money, and depending on the number of participants, may also win extra prize money.
Free Roll
Games in which players can participate without a buy-in amount. Prize money is guaranteed by the tournament.
Buy-in (+ Entry Fee)
A participation fee and commission paid to participate in an ordinary game
Ticket
A format in which the cash used for buy-ins is replaced by a ticket
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Tournament Type

  • Regular

    A typical, ordinary tournament

  • Turbo

    A tournament in which the level is raised faster than in a regular tournament

  • Hyper Turbo

    A tournament in which the level is raised even faster than in a turbo tournament

  • Knock Out

    In this format, a bounty is placed on all players participating. Players who defeat another player and knock them out of the tournament are rewarded the amount placed on their opponent. Amounts are paid out independently from ranking-based prize money

    • - A certain percentage of buy-in is allocated to prize money / bounties
    • - Total bounty / number of game participants = individual bounty size
  • Satellite

    A tournament in which the prize is a ticket into a higher-level tournament

    • - APL Poker offers event tickets and gold tickets
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Brayden Haynes, the CEO of Australian Poker League (APL) parent company Full House Group, speaks with PokerMedia Australia’s Ben Blaschke about the impact of COVID-19 and what the future holds for the local poker scene.

PokerMedia Australia: Thanks for chatting with us Brayden. First of all, can you explain the impact the current COVID-19 shutdown of pubs, clubs and casinos around the country has had on Full House Group?

Brayden Haynes: The Australian Poker League runs about 800 poker tournaments a week across the country. I guess as the government restrictions around the virus were getting stronger on the way down, we knew it was an inevitability that pubs and clubs would be closing and we would need to prepare everyone to be out of work for a little while.

For us, certainly on the way down, we were focused on making sure the venues that still wanted to run and had the right to run poker, that we were supporting them through that process. We were also taking the social distancing measures seriously and had implemented a few things to make sure there was an increased level of safety for the players.

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Then as the venues closed our thoughts turned to all of our people who are involved in the network. We have about 30 full-time staff at Full House Group and another 30 licensees that distribute the products all around the country, plus our network of tournament directors and hosts who are also impacted. It has obviously been a pretty stressful time for us and for the whole industry in general.

PMA: How big is that network when you include your tournament directors?

BH: It is probably close to 400 people

PMA: What has the company been doing to support those staff members throughout this pandemic?

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BH: We’ve stayed in pretty close contact with the Full House Group staff and the licensees. We’ve had weekly catch-ups with our staff, sometimes more frequently than that.

All staff were stood down but most of our staff are doing a day or two’s work here or there at the moment just to stay in touch and get ready for a relaunch when that happens.

PMA: Before the shutdown it seemed like the APL was chugging along nicely. What were the short-term plans moving forward at that time?

BH: We came off the back of the largest APL Million that had been run in the four years we have run the event, which was quite exciting (the main event attracted a record field of 1,404 players). As we were at the APL Million there was some talk of coronavirus and the fact that it was bubbling away a little bit in the background, but it wasn’t impacting at that point in time.

Certainly the APL Million was a massive success and it had been a really exciting time for live poker in general the past couple of years. Since online poker went down in September 2017 it had really brought the live poker community together, and there had been a resurgence that we had seen in our business and right across the country with many of the other live events that had been running. So the APL Million was a big focus for us.

This year we were also getting ready to launch the APL PT – our poker tour events. We had a new system where players were winning credits into events and they were able to view and access those credits via their online website account. They were also able to transfer them to other players in certain circumstances so we were creating a community and economy that had these poker tour credits and we were really looking forward to running those new events.

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PMA: Is it simply a case now of putting all of that on hold or will you have to reconsider the strategy?

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BH: It is a little bit too early to tell but certainly those events are on hold for now. There is no doubt they will be returning though. We will be running them at some point but until we are aware of what environment we can operate in it’s a bit difficult to plan for those events at this stage.

We really need to understand what the restrictions are going to be. Pubs and clubs opening is one thing – and I’m sure that will be happening at some stage in the not too distant future – but how they open and what the restrictions are, particularly around social distancing, will be critical to whether or not poker tournaments can operate in venues.

I think it’s going to be pretty difficult if social distancing measures remain similar to what they have been. On the way down there was a restriction of 25 people per 100-square metre room, or one person per four square metres. To run poker in that type of environment is going to be pretty tricky, particularly when you have to maintain that 1.5 metre distance between players as well.

I think it’s important that we wait and see how it plays itself out but the poker tour events will certainly be returning at some point in the future. It’s just a matter of when it is safe for them to operate again.

PMA: Are you still confident of what the long-term future holds?

BH: Definitely, definitely. At the moment we are in the middle of a lockdown period but there is no doubt the live poker scene was thriving and no reason to think we won’t be able to resume that.

I think we do have to be realistic in that when the doors to the venues open, it is not going to be like a tap that we turn on again. A lot of venues will have suffered financially through this and their ability to re-open and resume normal entertainment services might be limited in the early stages. Some venues will probably want to get going straight away and will probably want to start entertainment to attract patrons through their doors. Others are probably going to be more focused on opening the more efficient areas of their business and just trying to rebuild and scale up more slowly.

I’m sure everyone wants to open their doors and have a big party but I just don’t think that is likely. I think we’ll be re-opening venues with social distancing measures in place and that’s going to mean there will be restrictions on operating, which will mean we’ll need to find new ways of running events with those sorts of things in mind.

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PMA: Do you see this whole COVID-19 experience changing the Australian poker industry in any way?

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BH: Online poker is still an unregulated market and although there are ways and means by which people are enjoying a game of poker at the moment, those methods are ultimately still unregulated, so unless there is regulation in this market I don’t see there being huge changes.

I think the longer the current methods that people are using to play online continue, the more likely it is that restrictions will be put on those and the more likely it is that the governing bodies will take action around the unlawful means with which people are finding a way to play at the moment.

We’re certainly supportive of a regulated online poker market. I think that would be a wonderful thing for the industry. And if there is a regulated online market in Australia it would really help the overall growth of the market – the rising tide floats all boats theory. I think there would be a lot of international and local investment into the community and that would support the industry in general.

Long-term, anticipating a relatively slow rebuild is probably something we need to get used to but I also think there is going to be a great deal of excitement when people can get out and play again. The poker market in Australia is very, very healthy so people will be eager to get out and play when the opportunity arises.

PMA: If online poker was to be regulated in Australia, would the APL want to be involved?

BH: Definitely. If there is a regulated online poker market then APL would certainly be involved in some capacity. That’s something that would appeal to all poker players in Australia.

It’s also something which brings a lot of investment into the market which creates opportunity for a range of different businesses but also for the players, because when there is investment there is more awareness, bigger prize pools and just a healthier industry overall.

A regulated online poker market is something we should be working towards because I do believe it will assist both live and online poker in this country.