Tournament Navigating Bubble Play in Rebuy Tournaments David Parker URL has been copied successfully! Those who adapt quickly during bubble play tend to build stacks right when others freeze Bubble play in rebuy tournaments creates a unique dynamic that experienced players can exploit. Unlike freezeouts, stacks are often deeper due to multiple re-entries, which changes both risk tolerance and pressure points. Understanding this difference is key. The first adjustment comes from recognizing that many players still treat the bubble like a traditional survival spot. That creates opportunity. Players who have already invested heavily through rebuys may tighten up, trying to secure a cash. Others, especially short stacks, may take high-variance lines out of frustration. Your job is to identify which is which. If you have a medium-to-big stack, aggression becomes your main weapon. Target players who appear hesitant, particularly those hovering around average stack size. Open wider from late position and apply pressure with well-timed 3-bets. The goal is not reckless aggression, but controlled pressure against players who want to avoid confrontation. Short stacks require a different approach. In rebuy formats, fold equity can be lower because opponents are more willing to gamble. That means shove spots must be tighter and better structured. Look for positions where your stack still threatens opponents’ tournament life, not just their chips. Another overlooked factor is payout structure. Many rebuy events have flatter min-cashes relative to total investment. That reduces the value of simply sneaking into the money. In practice, this means you should lean more toward chip accumulation than pure survival. Bubble play in these events rewards awareness. Pay attention to stack distribution, table tendencies, and player psychology.