Part: Part Thirteen - Miscellaneous

Whether to make a deal

Pre-flop
Blinds 400 / 800Pot 1,200 (1.5 BB)Final 3 • big pay jumps • stacks evenBTN 40,000 (50 BB)YOUdeal under discussionSB 38,000 (47.5 BB)Player 2~1/3 of chipsBB 42,000 (52.5 BB)Player 3~1/3 of chipsD

You're down to the final three. Stacks are roughly even, big pay jumps remain, and you have no clear skill edge. The other two propose an even chip-chop deal.

Final three, even stacks, big pay jumps, no real edge - they offer a deal. Best?

WhyConsider (and likely accept). With close stacks, big remaining pay jumps, and no significant skill advantage, a deal locks in a large share of the prize money and removes enormous variance. Decline only if you're a clear favorite who can press an edge - here, taking a fair deal is sound bankroll management.
What happensYou weigh your edge against the variance.  A fair deal cuts risk.
Deals trade upside for certainty: with even stacks, big pay jumps, and no real edge, locking in equity is smart - you'd only play on if you were a clear skill favorite.

Consider a deal when variance is high relative to your edge - even stacks and big pay jumps make locking in prize money sound; decline only with a clear advantage.