Your shove ranges at this stage should be completely dependent on the effective stack size (the person with less chips, in terms of big blinds) and the range of hands you think that your opponent is limping.
You should have the same shove range in 20/40 with 200 stacks as you should in 50/100 with 500 effective stacks because they are both 5BB deep. It will also vary from person to person. Some people only limp hands that they are unwilling to risk an all-in with, whereas others will only limp hands when they are trying to induce a shove from you.
There are a great deal of players that are kind of "hesitant" to commit a lot of chips to the pot in the earlier levels, and stay sort of weakish (they don't fold everything, but they are the type you can double barrel bluff more often profitably). The guys like this that actually raise a small but strong range are the perfect guys to abuse a few times when they limp by shoving really wide. It's kind of a leveling game I guess, b/c some of these guys will adjust and limp their very next strong hand after only one shove and some will just keep limp/folding over and over to your shoves. I usually don't wait to find out about the latter, but vs virtually all of these players you're good for one or two pure fold equity limp shoves.
Your shove ranges at this stage should be completely dependent on the effective stack size (the person with less chips, in terms of big blinds) and the range of hands you think that your opponent is limping.
You should have the same shove range in 20/40 with 200 stacks as you should in 50/100 with 500 effective stacks because they are both 5BB deep. It will also vary from person to person. Some people only limp hands that they are unwilling to risk an all-in with, whereas others will only limp hands when they are trying to induce a shove from you.
Against a opponent in the first few hands of 10-12 effective BBs what are you shoving over limps.
Not Many, unless I have some read that he is always foilding.
There are a great deal of players that are kind of "hesitant" to commit a lot of chips to the pot in the earlier levels, and stay sort of weakish (they don't fold everything, but they are the type you can double barrel bluff more often profitably). The guys like this that actually raise a small but strong range are the perfect guys to abuse a few times when they limp by shoving really wide. It's kind of a leveling game I guess, b/c some of these guys will adjust and limp their very next strong hand after only one shove and some will just keep limp/folding over and over to your shoves. I usually don't wait to find out about the latter, but vs virtually all of these players you're good for one or two pure fold equity limp shoves.