Is It Worth Playing Cash Games During the WSOP?

The focus of players heading to the 2025 World Series of Poker (WSOP) is on tournament poker, and rightly so because that is what the WSOP is all about. One hundred live bracelet-awarding events plus 30 online events adorn the bustling 2025 WSOP schedule. It is fair to say that tournaments dominate Las Vegas when the WSOP is in town.
But what about cash games? Everyone knows Las Vegas is the place to be if you are a cash game grinder. Is it worth playing cash games during the WSOP? The answer is a resounding yes.
Here are some reasons we go over in this article:
- More recreational players
- Tournament players playing cash games
- Playing cash as satellites
- Where should I play?
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Players tend to specialize in one poker format: cash games or multi-table tournaments. The rules to both formats are the same – a flush beats a straight, for example – but being successful in either field requires different skills.
The sheer number of poker players being in Las Vegas for the WSOP and the various other tournament series that piggyback the series means card rooms are frequently packed to bursting. Cash games run 24 hours per day; you are spoiled for choice as a cash game player.
There Are Plenty of Recreational Players Playing Cash Games During the WSOP
You will find more recreational players than you can shake a stick at hitting the cash game tables during the WSOP. Hundreds, if not thousands, of low-to-mid stakes players jet off to "Sin City" to chase their dreams of winning a bracelet. A large percentage of these players are found grinding micro and low stakes online cash games at home, and suddenly find themselves playing $1/$2 and $1/$3 games in Vegas.

Playing outside of their comfort zone often results in those players approaching the games in a more passive manner than when they play online. Furthermore, a busy poker room attracts Vegas tourists to the table who want to kill an hour or two while hoping to win some spending money.
Low-stakes cash games in Vegas are notoriously soft. This is amplified during the WSOP when poker rooms are at their busiest.
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Remember how we said that a different skill set is required for success in cash games and tournaments? Well, some players fail to realise this and, thus, become a mark at the cash tables.
Cash game players are used to playing deep-stacked, usually 100 big blinds deep, while tournament players rarely have this many chips. They, however, are stronger players with 30-60 big blind stacks, the stack size they are accustomed to playing from in their usual games.
Some players excel in both cash and MTTs but they are a rarity, especially at the lower end of the buy-in spectrum. Where the better cash game players push every edge and will take a 55/45 scenario every day of the week, MTT players are more used to conserving their stack and will sometimes miss spots where they could extract value.
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Any mistakes made when stacks are deep are amplified. Taking on a player playing an unfamiliar game, with a stack size they rarely find themselves armed with, can and does lead to a lot of mistakes being made. We profit, in the long run, whenever our opponents make a mistake.
Furthermore, you sometimes find tournament players sitting down at cash game tables while they wait for their event to start, or shortly after busting from a tournament. These players often are not in the correct frame of mind to play solid poker because they either have one eye on their event starting or are recapping key hands that resulted in their elimination. Any player not fully concentrating on the task at hand will bleed chips.
Cash Games Can Be An Alternative to Satellites
You sometimes find both cash game and tournament players switching to cash games as an alternative route to paying for a higher buy-in tournament. Satellite tournaments generally run around the clock during the WSOP, giving players the chance to turn a relatively small investment into a shot at a bracelet and at the big time.
Grinding cash games for tournament buy-ins is not the most effective route into a larger buy-in event, but it is a viable option. For example, if you want to play in a $1,000 No-Limit Hold’em tournament, you could play $1/$2 during some downtime and win money towards your entry fee.
Players who choose this road to qualify for a tournament tend to play looser and want to play for larger points. They do not want to grind $1/$2 for 50 hours at $20 per hour to play their way into a $1,000 WSOP event. They want to play for larger pots, even for full stacks, and will therefore be looser and more aggressive.
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Where Should I Play Cash Games During the WSOP?
You are spoiled for choice when it comes to playing cash games during the WSOP. As mentioned, poker rooms around Las Vegas are bustling with players during one of the busiest times of the year.
Expect the WSOP to host a wide selection of cash games at its host venues, Horsehoe and Paris. Cash games are traditionally played out at Paris Hotel during the WSOP, and is equipped with luxury chairs and tables, fantastic dealers along with some top-notch table service. Whether you end up a winner or loser, the chance to play or converse with some of poker's biggest names could make it worth your while.
The Venetian, Bellagio, and Wynn on the Las Vegas Strip have busy card rooms. These rooms also attract more than their fair share of tourists, often tourists with deep pockets.
And there'll also be somewhere new to play this summer with Planet Hollywood opening their brand new poker room in May.
It is worthwhile checking out the Poker Atlas app which lists all the cash games currently running, including, in most cases, the length of the waiting lists at each Vegas room.
In this Series
- 1 What to Expect from GGPoker's First Summer WSOP Schedule Release
- 2 Mark Your Calendar: 2025 WSOP to Run in Las Vegas from May 27-July 16
- 3 2025 WSOP Schedule Released: 100 Bracelet Events Confirmed
- 4 Hellmuth Calls Time on the WSOP Main Event: 'I Just Can't Do It Anymore'
- 5 Negreanu, Other Poker Pros Sound Off on Hellmuth's WSOP Main Event Complaints
- 6 Fedor Holz Says WSOP Bans Are Coming for Online Poker Cheaters
- 7 WSOP Bracelets - All Your Questions Answered
- 8 Daniel Negreanu Reveals His WSOP 2025 Schedule; 'Kid Poker' to Play the Seniors Event?
- 9 What Are the Biggest Wins in WSOP History?
- 10 Poker Raffles Is Sending Someone to the WSOP Main Event for Only £1
- 11 PokerNews Daily Deepstack Challenge Returns to 2025 WSOP w/ 50 SEATS for Deepstack Championship
- 12 What Happened to Peter Eastgate's 2008 WSOP Main Event Bracelet That Sold for $150,000?
- 13 Is a Poker Vlogger an Industry Employee? WSOP's New Rules Stir Controversy
- 14 What Are the Biggest Wins in WSOP History?
- 15 WSOP Records That Will (Probably) Never Be Broken
- 16 Looking at the Worst Bad Beats in World Series of Poker History
- 17 WSOP Tournament of Champions $1 Million Freeroll Returning to Commerce Casino May 15-17
- 18 Is It Worth Playing Cash Games During the WSOP?
- 19 TripAdvisor’s Top 10 Things To Do In Las Vegas During The 2025 WSOP
- 20 How Foreign Travelers to the 2025 WSOP Will Be Impacted by Trump's Executive Order
- 21 WSOP+ App Launches to Streamline 2025 World Series of Poker Experience
- 22 Electronic Devices, Player Bans & More: 6 Key 2025 WSOP Rule Changes You Must Know
- 23 Check Out the PokerGO Streaming Schedule for the 2025 World Series of Poker
- 24 Find Out Why Shaun Deeb Gives Away All of His WSOP Gold Bracelets