Why the poker is the point
Strip away the casino marketing and ignition casino poker is what people actually come for: a functioning online poker room at a time when licensed Australian options barely exist. The format choices are deliberately recreational-friendly.
| Format | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Anonymous cash tables | Players shown as seat numbers; no screen names, no HUDs or tracking | Recreational players who do not want to be profiled by regulars |
| Daily tournaments | Scheduled multi-table events across buy-in levels | Players who like a defined session with a prize ladder |
| Sit and Gos | Single-table events that start when full | Quick sessions, on-demand |
| Jackpot Sit and Gos | Fast three-handed events with a randomised prize multiplier | Lottery-style upside on a small buy-in |
The poker room is the brand's whole pitch; ten minutes at a table shows why.
Open the LobbyChoosing a format: time, variance, temperament
The table above says what each format is; this one says what it costs you in time and swings, which is the decision that actually matters. Pick by the session you want to have, not by the prize pool.
| Format | Time commitment | Variance | The sane habit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anonymous cash tables | Leave whenever you like; no fixed end | Low to moderate per session, but no floor under losses | Buy in for one session's entertainment and stand up when it is gone |
| Daily tournaments (MTTs) | Hours if you run deep; plan the evening around it | High: most entries win nothing, deep runs pay well | Treat the buy-in as the full cost of the night, spent at registration |
| Sit and Gos | A defined, shortish session that starts on demand | Moderate: shallow prize ladder, quick resolution | Set a fixed number of entries per session, not a loss target |
| Jackpot Sit and Gos | Minutes: fast, three-handed | Very high: the randomised multiplier is the draw | Smallest stakes only, lottery mindset, never a volume grind |
A structured tournament evening looks like this: pick one event with a buy-in you would happily spend on any other night out, register, and let the format do the pacing. Early levels are cheap and forgiving, the middle is where patience earns, and if you reach the ladder the money decisions become real. Win or lose, the session ends by design, which is exactly the property cash tables lack and exactly why every guide on this site points a first-timer at a tournament. If tournaments hook you, the lobby's live schedule shows what runs tonight across buy-in levels; start at the bottom of the ladder and let results argue for moving up.
Rakeback and the honest value
Volume players earn rakeback (a slice of the rake returned), which compounds into real value over a month; casual players get the anonymous-table protection instead. Both are legitimate reasons to choose Ignition; neither is a bonus you should over-play to chase. The mistake the complaint threads catch is grinding tournaments past your bankroll to hit a rakeback tier; the limit tools keep poker a game rather than a job. Everything practical about getting to the tables (the client, the login, the crypto cashouts) is one click away; this page is about why the room is worth the trip.