Ahhh...2NL. Oh, how I've missed you. Well, not really. I hit 2NL up and I hit it hard tonight. I played 914 hands and won $22.98 to go an astonishing 62.86BB/100. I forgot exactly how easy 2NL is...and it's 100x easier the second time around (although I obviously hit many good hands). 2NL plays TOTALLY different than 5NL or 10NL, no matter what people say (and probably all limits above that as well...I just don't want to comment on limits I haven't played). I guess if I'm going to climb the ladder back up to 10NL, I might as well chronicle everything I see instead of just updating you guys on my progress. Anyway, here goes:
Generally speaking, I see three types of villains at 2NL. One villain has a ridiculously high VPIP and a near-zero PFR. Another is the maniac with a high VPIP and PFR. Finally comes the ubernit (probably multi-tabling 8-15 tables). This villain only plays AJs+, AQo+, and TT+.
The most common villain seems to be Mr. High VPIP, No PFR. This villain LOVES to see flops. One general rule here is to raise preflop with strong-medium hands. This villain will call with just about anything and this is a major leak (this leak basically helped me win the money I did today). Now, villain sees the flop...and it's fit-or-fold time (SUPER leak...#1 MONEYMAKER!). Simply c-bet the flop and they'll most likely fold. If they call, they've hit something. If you have something yourself, VALUETOWN! Seriously that simple.
In addition to the whole raising, c-bet idea...another way to beat this villain is by limping. Yes, LIMPING! A major difference between 2NL and the other limits is the super-low PFR. This means that you will NOT be punished for limping with a raise behind you (well, most of the time you won't be). I was limping away in all positions with my connectors, small pocket pairs, and suited one-gappers. Hopefully you hit the flop hard and are able to take villain to valuetown. If not, bluff the pot (if board texture dictates it smart to) and hope villain didn't hit a thing (which he probably didn't most of the time).
One more thing about this villain...if you ever find yourself facing a preflop raise, know you're probably facing quite the strong hand and play accordingly.
Now, the maniacs: possibly the biggest goldmine of them all. I don't understand what exactly is going through their mind...but I guess they assume over-aggression will win them pots...and they're right. However, these pots are tiny. Their preflop raises mean NOTHING. The easiest way I find beating them is to call them down with your medium-strength hands...you are more than likely ahead. Obviously your premium hands work amazingly here as they will play right into them. There is no need to build a pot as they will do it for you.
The ubernits usually don't help you win much money unless you hit against them. I may call they're raise with a speculative hand. The ubernits hand is basically turned face-up at this point. Use this to your advantage. Tonight I called with a pocket pair and hit my set. Ubernit obviously had an overpair and put himself all-in. SHIP IT!
As for playing Ax, be kicker careful! Like other limits (at least 5NL), these players love playing ANY ace. Be careful with pairs of aces and low-kickers being that there may just be an ace with a higher kicker on the other end. This advice goes for poker in general...but I guess I'm just saying be extra careful around players that will never fold aces. You can't bluff them off that ace (they just don't understand the concept of shitty kickers I guess).
One outstanding thing I've noticed at 2NL is the min-bet. I don't really understand this move much and hopefully somebody can clarify what they believe it means. What do I mean by min-bet? I've seen players bet two cents into a pot of 98 cents. What the HELL does that mean? Mostly, I've seen it signifies a bottom or middle pair (never usually top pair). However, I would sometimes raise this bet to only have this answered by a reraise. Players in 2NL don't usually bluff so I'm gone after this reraise. I'm definitely going to say that this bet puzzles me a bit. It USUALLY signifies weakness but there ARE times that villain will 3bet. Anybody with any advice on this queer (this word works in so many ways here) bet?
As for the "small hand, small pot; big hand, big pot," notion; this is totally out the window for me at these stakes. Players at this level are willing to call huge bets down to the river with TPNK. It really is amazing. TPTK and two pair win HUGE pots at these stakes. I don't mind creating a huge pot with my TPTK and bringing villain all-in...I'm usually ahead.
I'm no expert on poker and am nowhere CLOSE to one. I actually suck ass at poker (no joke, I do). I'm sure I'm going to get flamed for most of the things I wrote here...but this is just what I find to hold true at 2NL. And again, this is ONLY for 2NL. I find this limit to play different from ANY other limit. I TOTALLY disagree with those that say 2NL plays just like 5NL. There's no way it does. Players here are literally throwing their money into a pot that they CANNOT win. It's up to you to just TAKE it!