@pokerheadrush Meaning if they bet big on the river, they usually have it. The exception is if your check or slow play has induced a bluff. Stay aware of what you're encouraging.
If you're normally a low stakes player and you find yourself at the WSOP surrounded by sharks, play home run poker. Play top 10 hands, raise bigger pre, and reshove often. Late in the tourney will need to adjust but this gives a rec the best chance of going deep. The meta game and level of aggression by elite players doesn't like to face the above strategy.
As stacks get shorter the value of big cards goes up obviously, but no this also applies to deep stack situations. If a novice or recreational player is only coming in strong with good pairs and big aces they will put the pressure back on aggressive opponents, who may get frustrated waiting for premiums or the right price to see flops with implied odds hands, which will also realize their equity far less vs this range.
@Choppodong1@dadscrushpoker@WSOP@GGPoker This is a good heuristic and works for tourneys also. Only caveat is with a ton of small stakes players it just comes down to do I avoid bluffing the station or do I blast the mouse. On those hands you can generally rest the CPU lol.