i was able to reach that one but thats there are still more stuff to do and there are more steps to be done
Personally, I'd start by accepting that you're not going to win a lot of them, or even cash in a lot of them.
Tournament poker is one of the highest variance forms of poker there is. You can play fantastically well for hours, even days, then lose a flip and be out without any money. You can go dozens of tournaments without cashing and you can go a lot more than that without taking down a major prize - and that's if you're a solid, winning player to begin with. The idea is that your occasional big wins make up for all your pre-bubble knockouts and min-cashes.
If you want consistent earnings, my advice would be to play cash games or maybe single-table SnGs. They're games where (again, assuming you're a winning player) you can make small amounts of money consistently rather than large amounts occasionally.
If you're determined to play multi-table tournaments though then study the game, do your utmost to remain focussed at the table, study your opponents carefully and try to select tournaments that offer you good value - overlays where the number of entries don't cover the prize pool guarantee, for example.
+1Personally, I'd start by accepting that you're not going to win a lot of them, or even cash in a lot of them.
Tournament poker is one of the highest variance forms of poker there is. You can play fantastically well for hours, even days, then lose a flip and be out without any money. You can go dozens of tournaments without cashing and you can go a lot more than that without taking down a major prize - and that's if you're a solid, winning player to begin with. The idea is that your occasional big wins make up for all your pre-bubble knockouts and min-cashes.
If you want consistent earnings, my advice would be to play cash games or maybe single-table SnGs. They're games where (again, assuming you're a winning player) you can make small amounts of money consistently rather than large amounts occasionally.
If you're determined to play multi-table tournaments though then study the game, do your utmost to remain focussed at the table, study your opponents carefully and try to select tournaments that offer you good value - overlays where the number of entries don't cover the prize pool guarantee, for example.
Personally, I'd start by accepting that you're not going to win a lot of them, or even cash in a lot of them.
Tournament poker is one of the highest variance forms of poker there is. You can play fantastically well for hours, even days, then lose a flip and be out without any money. You can go dozens of tournaments without cashing and you can go a lot more than that without taking down a major prize - and that's if you're a solid, winning player to begin with. The idea is that your occasional big wins make up for all your pre-bubble knockouts and min-cashes.
If you want consistent earnings, my advice would be to play cash games or maybe single-table SnGs. They're games where (again, assuming you're a winning player) you can make small amounts of money consistently rather than large amounts occasionally.
If you're determined to play multi-table tournaments though then study the game, do your utmost to remain focussed at the table, study your opponents carefully and try to select tournaments that offer you good value - overlays where the number of entries don't cover the prize pool guarantee, for example.