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- Buy-In: $10,000
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- Number of entries: 10,112
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- Prize pool: $94,041,600
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- Players paid: 1,517
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- Min cash: $15,000
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- Final table payouts:
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- $10,000,000
- $6,000,000
- $4,000,000
- $3,000,000
- $2,500,000
- $2,000,000
- $1,500,000
- $1,250,000
- $1,000,000
- Final table payouts:
You can immediately see that even though this year’s tournament broke last year’s record for the number of entries, the first-place prize is smaller. WSOP was under serious heat for its 2023 main event payout structure. They tried to capture the opportunity to advertise the biggest main event first-place prize in history. However, that strategy backfired on them, as the players were upset when the payouts were made public. The top payout stood at $12.1 million, with second place being ‘just’ $6.5 million. The 9th place finisher didn’t even get a seven-figure payout. The players pointed out that everyone who reached the final table should get at least $1 million, as they managed to outlast over ten thousand people. It seems that WSOP acknowledged this year that the players were correct in their assessment and that their publicity stunt was not worth the backlash they received.
The Conclusion
While we might have to wait another couple of years to break another record for the WSOP 2024 main event first-place prize, we can expect the field to keep growing. Despite what some might say, poker is not a dying game. On the contrary, with prize pools constantly getting bigger both live and online, we can safely say that poker has some exciting times ahead.