Don’t Miss These Online Poker Tournaments This Weekend

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Senior Editor
3 min read
Weekend online poker tournament action

The weekend is almost upon us and that most of us have two days away from the coalface that we can spend playing online poker! Every day is packed full of intense poker tournament action in the online poker world, but there are some events that you simply can’t afford to miss as the penultimate week of February draws to a close.

Play For a Share of $300,000 in the GG Masters

The GG Masters is one of the fastest-growing poker tournaments found anywhere online. GGPoker has created a fantastic weekly tournament that is ridiculous value for anyone who is willing to satellite in or pay the $150 buy-in.

$300,000 is guaranteed

to be won for that $150, as the GG Masters: $300K Gtd name suggests. But there’s more to this tournament because it is a freezeout, which is something of a rarity these days, and you earn leaderboard points based on your finishing position.

You can earn leaderboard points all year round in an attempt to get your hands on some cool prize. The player with the most points at the end of the calendar year wins a GG sponsorship package that’s valued at $500,000.

Those players finishing in second-place through tenth-place receive tickets to every GG Masters tournament in 2021, valued at a cool $78,000 if the buy-in remains the same.

Last week’s GG Masters saw 2,135-players turn out in force, including GGPoker ambassador Daniel Negreanu. While Negreanu failed to cash, Brazil’s “mayKKz_” went all the way and banked the $44,710 top prize while giving themselves a great chance of winning that $500K package.

Buy-in, satellite in, or sell pieces of yourself for this tournament. Whatever you do, don’t miss out.

More Than $1.6 Million Guaranteed in the KO Super Sunday Series at partypoker

partypoker’s KO Series finished last week but they’ve created the KO Super Sunday series for this weekend.

Twenty PKO tournaments with buy-ins ranging from $2.20 up to $2,100 are scheduled between 4:30 p.m. CET and midnight on February 23rd. Combine their guaranteed prize pools and they add up to more than $1.6 million.

Several formats and variants are on the schedule, including 8-max, 6-max pot-limit Omaha, 8-Max Fast, PKO Battle, and Mix-Max 8-6.

First glance doesn’t reveal many actual satellites, but you can win tournament dollars via special tournament dollar satellites and use these to buy into the KO Super Sunday events.

You’ll love KO Super Sunday if you even remotely enjoyed the KO Series.

This Week’s Sunday Million Only Costs $54.50 at PokerStars

PokerStars is gearing up for its biggest ever Sunday Million on March 22nd by halving the buy-in of this weekend’s tournament. The Sunday Million usually costs $109 to enter, but the one on February 23rd will only set you back $54.50!

It’s guarantee remains the same $1 million although you’ll have to wait two days before you’re crowned the champion because this is a two-day event. Day 1 ends after 9.5 hours of play with Day 2 resuming at 7:00 p.m. CET on Monday evening.

Satellites from a mere $0.25 are available for the Half Price Sunday Million, meaning this huge tournament is open to absolutely everyone. Will you become its champion?

Turn $5 Into a Shot at a $100,000 Prize Pool at 888poker

Over at 888poker, you have the chance to turn a $5 satellite ticket into a slice of a cool $100,000. The $100,000 Sunday Mega Deep is a great tournament that always hovers around the correct number of entrants to hit the guarantee.

Everyone sits down with 50,000 chips and plays to a blind structure that increases every 12-minutes after starting at 150/300/40a.

Direct satellites start at only $5 with feeders for these weighing at an extremely affordable $1.

Here’s to writing about you in Monday’s Sunday Briefing article!

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Senior Editor

Matthew Pitt hails from Leeds, West Yorkshire, in the United Kingdom, and has worked in the poker industry since 2008, and worked for PokerNews since 2010. In September 2010, he became the editor of PokerNews. Matthew stepped away from live reporting duties in 2015, and now concentrates on his role of Senior Editor for the PokerNews.

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