You are playing at a table with a player who believes he is the best player at the table and is known to tilt easily when he is bluffed. You get into a hand with him and successfully bluff him into folding! Do you show him your bluff? Is it fair play to take actions that tilt other players?
Well you have to remember that it is part of the game. You simply want to set that person up so that he calls you when you are not bluffing. It's a sound strategy and I'm sure most of the players use it. Just keep them guessing and show that you are not scared of their play.You are playing at a table with a player who believes he is the best player at the table and is known to tilt easily when he is bluffed. You get into a hand with him and successfully bluff him into folding! Do you show him your bluff? Is it fair play to take actions that tilt other players?
If there is no offense, I think it's valid. I've seen it happen in a live tournament, two players start a meta game, and one of them shows 2 bluffs in two consecutive hands and laughs afterwards. In the third hand, the player who showed the bluffs found value in the hand and the other failed to fold an average hand and lost all his chips. This is one of the success stories, that perhaps if the player who showed the bluff, perhaps he would not have won so many chips because of this metagame that happened before the final handYou are playing at a table with a player who believes he is the best player at the table and is known to tilt easily when he is bluffed. You get into a hand with him and successfully bluff him into folding! Do you show him your bluff? Is it fair play to take actions that tilt other players?