Play in the €1M Guaranteed PokerStars Sunday Million LIVE For Free

Matthew Pitt
Senior Editor
2 min read

The PokerStars Sunday Million tournament is evolving and stepping outside of the online arena with the Sunday Million LIVE.

The Sunday Million LIVE takes place from Aug. 24 though to Sept. 4 both online at PokerStars and live at the excellent King’s Casino in Rozvadov in the Czech Republic. Players in the online Day 1s sit down with a 20,000 starting stack and play to 12-minute blinds that start at 25/50. Once the field has been whittled to 10 percent of the total entrants, the tournament is paused an anyone with chips in front of them takes this stack through to the live Day 2 at King’s Casino.

These online Day 1s cost €215 to buy into, but thanks to the superb relationship that PokerStars and PokerNews enjoys, you could be playing in up to two of them for free! PokerNews readers from the United Kingdom, Germany and Poland are invited to play in a freeroll at 3:05 p.m. ET on Aug. 19 and Aug. 26 where the champion gets their hands on a €215 Sunday Million LIVE ticket, with those finishing in second place through to fourth place win a share of €50 in cash.

How to Enter

Entry to these three freerolls is by ticket only. The only way to get your hands on a ticket is if you meet the following criteria. If you meet the three criteria below, a ticket to each freeroll will be added to your account by the customer support team at PokerStars.

If you are eligible for the next two freerolls, check your account and see if you have a ticket in there that you can use to enter this value-packed freeroll on Aug. 19. Those of you without a PokerStars account can download PokerStars via PokerNews, enter the marketing code “PNEWS” and then make a deposit using the bonus code “STARS600” to make yourself eligible for the PokerNews-exclusive freerolls.

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Matthew Pitt
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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