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Multi-Table
Tournaments are scheduled to begin at a predetermined date and
time. Player are required to register in advance of the
tournament. Players may register for a tournament either until
the maximum number of players has been reached or 2 minutes
before the schedule start time, whichever comes first.
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Players who are
registered for a Multi-Table Tournament may unregister from that
tournament up until 10 minutes before the scheduled start time.
After the unregistration period ends, Multi-Table Tournaments
are treated as non-refundable. If a player unregisters from a
tournament, the buy-in will be refunded in the same form as it
was paid. For example, if a player buys into a tournament using
Summit Points, his buy-in will be refunded as Summit Points.
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If a player
unregisters from a tournament to which he gained entry as a
result of a satellite win or a special promotion, the buy-in
will be refunded in the form of tournament tokens plus cash. For
example, if a player wins a satellite to a tournament with a
buy-in of $100+9, the refund will be credited as 1 Gold Token
plus $9.
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Shortly before the
tournament is scheduled to begin, the registered players will be
randomly seated among as few tables as necessary to accomodate
all participants. Players have no control over either the tables
or seats at which they are placed throughout the tournament.
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Players are asked to
be logged in to Everest Poker and ready to play ten minutes
before the tournament is scheduled to begin. Players who do not
show up for the tournament on time will have their blinds posted
and cards folded until they join the tournament. Players who
register for freeroll tournaments and fail to login to Everest
Poker at all will be marked as absent and be removed from the
tournament after 5 minutes. Absent players are not removed from
tournaments for which they either won or paid their entry.
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Players who sit out
or are disconnected from freeroll tournaments for an extended
period of time will be removed. If a player pays any buy-in,
either real money or Summit Points, and sits out or is
disconnected from a tournament, the player will have the blinds
posted and cards folded automatically until the player returns
or runs out of chips.
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In the unlikely event
that a Multi-Table Tournament is cancelled by Everest Poker due
to technical, operational or any other reason, players who were
eliminated before the cancellation will not receive a refund of
their buy-in. Everest Poker will distribute the prize pool to
some or all of the remaining players at its sole discretion. If
the cancellation occurs before the tournament begins, all
players will have their buy-ins refunded.
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Unless explicitly
stated otherwise, all players begin with an equal number of
chips and the blinds and antes are raised at regular intervals.
See our Tournament Structure for details.
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Single-Table
Tournaments are played through completion without breaks. In
Multi-Table Tournaments, the tournament tables will have a five
(5) minute break after each hour of play.
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At the beginning of a
tournament, each player is randomly dealt one card from the
thirteen cards of one suit (for example, clubs ♣). The player
who receives the highest card is assigned the dealer button.
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Most Multi-Table
Tournaments are played until one player has all of the chips.
However, in cases which a specific number of top finishers will
receive the same prize, the tournament will be stopped once that
only that number of players remain.
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Each player has
thirty (30) seconds to act when it is their turn to do so. If
the player has an active Internet connection but does not act
within the time allotted, their cards will be folded.
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If a player loses
their Internet connection or otherwise disconnect from the
server, their blinds and antes will be posted and their cards
folded until the are able to reconnect and rejoin their
tournament.
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Everest Poker's
Disconnect Bet Protection Policy applies to tournaments.
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In tournament play,
Everest Poker observes a policy of no missed blinds in order to
make sure that every player posts the big blind when it is their
turn to do so. As a result, there are instances in which a
player will retain the dealer button for more than one hand.
There may also be hands in which a big blind is posted without a
small blind, if the player in the position to receive the small
blind was eliminated from the tournament in the previous hand.
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For limit
tournaments, each round of betting in a tournament is limited to
the initial bet plus three (3) raises. This limit is removed if
there are only two (2) players left in the hand. There are no
bet limits in no limit and pot limit tournaments.
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In the case of a
split pot that is not equally divisible by the number of winning
players, the player closest to the left of the dealer button
will receive the remaindered chips.
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In tournaments which
rebuys are allowed, players are permitted to purchase another
stack of chips for an additional fee. In most cases, the fee is
equal to the portion of the buy-in contributed to the prize pool
and the rebuy chip stack is equal to the starting chip stack.
However, the number of times which a player may rebuy, the
number of chips they receive, the rebuy fee and the currency
options for that fee may vary. In all cases, players are
permitted to rebuy only when their current chip count is equal
to or lesser than the starting chip count.
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If the tournament
allows an add-on, the add-on will take place at the end of the
rebuy period. Most of the rebuy restrictions also apply to the
add-on, with the exception that a player may add-on regardless
of chip count.
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If more than one
player gets eliminated in a single hand, the player who started
that hand with more chips will be awarded the higher finishing
place. If the eliminated players started with the same amount of
chips, the higher finishing place is awarded to the player who
joined the tournament first.
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As players are
eliminated from the tournament, the remaining players will be
consolidated into as few tables as possible. When moving players
from one table to another, Everest Poker will make every effort
to insure that no player misses his turn at the blinds or pays
the blinds an inordinate number of times.
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Everest Poker will do
its best to keep an equal amount of players at all tables. In
cases when there are six or fewer players remaining at table,
play at that table will be paused until such time as the tables
can be rebalanced.
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If a player wins a
share of the prize pool when he is eliminated from the
tournament, his account is credited with that prize after he
leaves the table. In the case of rebuy tournaments, prizes are
not awarded until the end of the rebuy period.
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At any point in time
during a tournament, the tournament software may start dealing
hand-by-hand. Hand-by-hand dealing is when the software waits
for all tables to finish the current hand before dealing the
next. This process discourages players from taking as long as
possible to play their hand in the hopes that a player at
another table will drop out, also known as "slow playing".
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When only two players
remain in a tournament, the player who is next to receive the
big blind will do so, and the second player will inherit the
small blind and the dealer button.
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Everest Poker does
not encourage, sanction, facililate, or enforce any deals or
partnerships made among players. Players who engage in deal
making do so at their own risk. Everest Poker neither permits
deal making in the player chat at the table nor enforces any
deals made between players.
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Players are
prohibited from discussing their cards, their opponents' cards
as well as the playing of the hand until that hand has been
completed.
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Players who engage in
unethical behavior such as soft playing or chip dumping risk
disqualification from the tournament as well as the termination
of their player accounts.
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Player agree to
adhere to the conditions of play outlined in our
Terms of Agreement.
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In case of disputes,
all decisions made by Everest Poker are final.
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At our sole
discretion, Everest Poker reserves the right to modify these
rules at any time.
The number of places
paid in a multi-table tournament is dependent upon the number of
players, not the size of the prize pool. For large tournaments at
Everest Poker, the general rule is to pay out 10 places for every
100 participants.
Satellite tournaments
are designed to feed players from one tournament to another, higher
stakes tournament. As a result, the payout table for satellite
tournaments is only used to distribute the portion of the prize pool
remaining after as many seats in the target tournament as possible
have been awarded. After those seats have been awarded, Everest
Poker pays out as many places as possible such that the smallest
payout is still greater than the satellite tournament buy-in.
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