Online Poker Room Review - Pure Gold Poker

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Online Poker Room
Name: Pure Gold Poker
Website: www.puregoldpoker.com
Poker Network: Tribeca (Victor Chandler)
Poker Platform: Tribeca Tables
Promotions
25% Deposit bonus
Support
Phone support: No
E-mail support: Yes
Chat support: No
Payment system
Name: Platinum Poker
Currency: USD
Finance Deposit Withdraw
Basic 900pay Yes Yes
Check Yes Yes
FirePay Yes Yes
MasterCard Yes Yes
Money Transfer/Western Union Yes Yes
Neteller Yes Yes
Pre-paid ATM Yes Yes
Pre-paid ATM Yes Yes
VISA Yes Yes
Wire Transfer Yes Yes
Overall rating       6
Bonus and promotions     5
Support     6
Financial     7
Owner dedication     3
Web site content     4
Rake     5
Game selection     6
Ring game traffic     6
Tournament traffic     8
Game speed     4
Graphics     9
Software functionality     8
Suitable for many tables     7
Limits
FL $0.02/$0.04 –$50/$100
NL/PL $10-$750
Table sizes
Ring: 6,9
Tourney: 2,6,9
Tournament buy-ins
$0.1-$500
Special Features
Very low buy-in tournaments
Network chat
Lots of info about players
Pros
Nice graphics
Lots of player information
Cons
Separate chat window
Screenshots
Online Poker Room Review
This poker room is managed by Platinum Poker and is a minor partner in the Tribeca network. Platinum Poker Tribeca skins appear to be more customized than most PokerBlasters and Victor Chandler rooms. However, what you sign up to is a minor partner in the network and although the design may differ between the web sites, the content is still word by word identical between the rooms – the difference can be captured by the following two sentences cut from two partners: “Gaming Floor is dedicated to providing an enjoyable, state-of-the-art Internet poker playing experience” and “Jill Ann Poker is dedicated to providing an enjoyable, state-of-the-art Internet poker playing experience”. Anyhow, at least there appears to be some sort of dedication at some level of the organization because at least they offer affiliate programs which most Tribeca partners don’t.

That said, there are no real reasons not to sign up to this poker room – it is perfectly safe. It is backed by a large organization, only not the organization you may be lead to believe if the web site is your only source of information.
Poker Network
Tribeca is divided into three sub-groups: Victor Chandler, Platinum and PokerBlasters. The level of support differs between these three. There is reasonably high traffic on ring games and tournaments alike. The network only offers Texas Hold’em, Omaha High and Omaha Hi/Lo but both fixed limit, pot limit and no limit games. Most partners in this network have very low dedication and their web sites are word-by-word identical. Only the name of the poker room and some minor graphical details typically differ between the skins. There is, however, a reasonable level of dedication on a more central level in the organization. Thus, even though the people behind the exact poker-something.com that you signed up with haven’t checked their email in two months you will still get service, promotions and support. Also, the content and promotional material that you get on the web sites and in emails is usually well written and entertaining to read. Also, beware that many of these poker rooms have non-functional support email address that bounces anything sent to it. There is however a phone number that goes somewhere more central and if you look up the support email from within the client you get support@pokersupport.com (which doesn’t bounce) rather than the address listed on the web site.
Poker platform
A bit jokingly it could be said that the Tribeca Tables software is used by more poker rooms than poker players. This is since it is the software used by the, to say the least, sprawling Apex network. The software, however, is very good and in fact it is used by quite a few more players than network skins. The Tribeca Tables software has been around for a long time and it is a good stable software that retains and improves on some if its trademark features. The most visible such feature is the common chat room that you encounter when starting the client. In most other clients the first you see is a list of tables, but not here. What’s more, the chat is actually quite busy and it is obvious that it adds to the experience for many players.

Finding the tables is not hard. There is a single row of buttons and the second one from the left reads “Tables”. Once you click this button the client looks more like you might be used to. You have the standard list of tables with buttons to change between game types, tourney/ring games and play money/real money. If you select a room you get all information about this table that you can wish for even including the geographical location of the players (to the extent that this information makes sense and is truthful). The waiting list options are more detailed than in most other clients. You can select the types of tables you want to wait for using a number of criteria that all make good sense.

Apart from the “Tables” button there are buttons leading to the cashier, the profile editor, a “buddies list” and support. You can specify a lot of information about yourself that is visible to other players and this does add another dimension to checking out who the other players around the table are – quite a few have entered something here since you get the impression that this is expected when you register. You can select avatars from a rather big gallery so there is a good chance you will find something you like. An anecdote: a friend of mine actually uploaded one of the Tribeca avatars to PokerStars where you can upload whatever you want. I don’t know, however, whether this says more about the gallery or about my friend.

One irritating thing about at least some of the Tribeca rooms is that they don’t allow more than two tables at a time. This is irritating for a number of reasons, one being that it is completely pointless: if someone wants to play five tables they will play the extra ones with someone else, or, worse, all if they think it’s irritating to use more than one interface. Thus, the effect on game speed is likely next to none. Well, among those two tables that you can play (or possibly more if your request it and have a good track record?) the focus transfer work well and sound effects are informative. It is reasonably visible whose turn it is and very visible if it is your turn: a large square around your cards flashes. The cards are shown very large and this is really useful I think since it does happen on some clients that you misread what you are holding. There is no slider in the big bet games, however, but instead a text edit field with buttons for increasing and decreasing bet sizes, buttons for entering multiples of the big blind. The tables work reasonably well for quick multi table play but by no means optimally. In the bottom right hand corner of the table window you find (along with your avatar for some reason) your hole cards, your current amount of chips and what your best hand at the moment is. This is useful when you are in your hand since the chip amount is hidden by your very large cards and when you have folded because you can see what it was that you mucked.

There is no dealer tray to click but instead a “$” button for brining in more chips and an “option” button for setting some preferences. This brings me to the chat function which, in my opinion, is a pain in the Tribeca software. The chat is in a separate window that will always quickly find its way to the bottom of your desktop and leave you browsing around the great number of windows in the activity field. When you do find it (or click the “view chat” button) you will see that you have the standard filters available plus a link to manager chat and profiles. Yes, there is a button for bringing the chat window up but still: it is an extra thing you have to do while playing and you have more important things on your mind when you are playing.

The tournaments are handled in a pretty standard and straightforward way. There is a tournament lobby for multi table tournaments but for single table sit and go’s there is just a table where you sit in on any available seat. While this makes it hard to introduce multi table sit and go’s it is a simple and quite adequate way of handling single tables tourneys.

The graphics of the Tribeca Tables software is in most cases excellent: beautiful chips, cards that are easy to read and sober graphics for face-down cards and tables and the surroundings. Overall the Tribeca Tables software is very attractive and since the poker rooms that use this software offer most types of games and have games going at most times there is no reason why you shouldn’t try it out.


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