The act of putting an opponent on tilt may not pay off in the short run, but if some time is put into practicing it, a player can quickly become an expert at "tilting" other players (with or without using bad manners). In theory, the long-run payoff of this
tactic is a monetarily
positive expectation. Common methods of putting a table on tilt include: • Playing junk hands that have a lower chance of winning in the hope of either sucking out and delivering a bad beat (which can be an enjoyable occasional style which will make the table's play "looser") or bluffing the opponent off a better hand (with the option of showing the bluff for maximum tilting effect). •
Victimising individuals at the table, (which is often considered a more old-fashioned tactic, identified with 1970s "verbal" experts such as
Amarillo Slim.) • Pretending intoxication, i.e.
hustling, excellently demonstrated by
Paul Newman against
Robert Shaw in
The Sting (although his technique included
cheating). • Constant chattering, making weird noises and motions whenever you win a hand, or other erratic behavior is a "tilting" or "loosening" approach first discussed by
Mike Caro. • Taking an inordinate or otherwise inappropriate amount of time to announce and show your hand (also called "slow-rolling") at the
showdown. (Such deliberate breaches of etiquette have the side effect of slowing play and risking barring, thereby limiting the earnings of the expert player. For this, and other
social reasons, such tactics are mostly associated with novices.) These antics can upset the other players at the table with the intention of getting them to play poorly. == See also ==