I agree, still a lot of money to be made. But only those who are willing to put in the work will succeed. Poker courses are a good way to get started but if one wants to reach the highest level, coaching is a must. I don't have a course. I just sell second hand courses from renown coaches.
Honestly, most of things or information could really be found on net which does mean that you wont really be needing to pay up some bucks or premium just to make yourself that knowledgeable on something.
You could really be on self learn and poker does seems not really that too complicated to understand.Also, building yourself on being a pro would actually be pertaining on actual
engagement or playing with other people which you would really be molding up your skills even more.Theories are good but experience is much always one step ahead.
Yes, in fact that is the main learning experience, but a person when he is a novice needs to know some things, tricks that can be taught in a course, perhaps to read movements or to detect when it is possibly a good moment to risk a lot of money in a hand or not, all these little details that are learned based on experience can be easily applied in a course.
I understand that a course does not say everything, but there are people who are very good at poker and who know when a course is good or not, and that is why you say, only those who are more expert due to experience are the ones who can give a review of the course.
It can be true of some things, but not about poker. Yes, you could learn a lot from your own experience if you were someone playing 20 tables at ones, 10 hours per day for 20 years, but it would be much easier, and faster, to learn how to play from a pro.
Well, actually that is an old discussion and after having played for a long time and having read a lot in poker forums, I could assure that there is an equivalence according to which studying poker is equivalent to many hours of practice. So if you want to learn and advance the best thing you can do is to study and play.
In low levels, when you start it is not so important but when you go up levels, and more with how hard the tables are nowadays, there are players who spend more time studying than playing.
If you're really interested in learning poker, you could do both things, study and play. It could be a quite long process of learning but you can also understand things easily if you will apply the things that you're learning through studying. You can't do poker perfectly for the first time but you can enjoy and be pro as you make it as a part of your habit.
There is nothing better than applying the knowledge learned in the games, because not only do you apply what you have learned, but you learn to have experiences and manage to combine more things together, of course, it must be taken into account that for poker it is not that there is a lot of theory, almost the same strategies will always be used, what changes is the way in which the player wants to approach the game, if a player wants to excel at any stage of the game he could do it, there is nothing that can stop him but his own personal strategy, the theory is there, but reality and the events that occur in the game are another thing.