This was my baby, not sure that anyone else fed into the initial proposition in too much detail - but it was clear that the idea would need to evolve over time. That said, happy to add my thoughts on a couple of areas that were discussed above that I continue to have an opinion on.
1) Event duration.
For me this is best ran as a one day event. I think momentum and information is important in this format, so to have a 24 or 48 hour delay between your qualifying, and the final, is an odd one for me.
2) End of the qualifying session.
Personally, I preferred when there wasn"t a chipcount or final x number of hands. For me, it"s about the players needing to maintain an awareness of where they are in the game across the final hour - by understanding the average stack sizes and how they compared. The imperfect information and session 1 deadline would encourage the fight or flight behaviour that was evident when we first ran this in the WCOAP. Now it seems a little too easy to decide.
3) Top ups.
It"s an APAT event, so personally I would limit top ups to 2 or 3 times the buy in. Otherwise an unlucky hand or two can wipe out a well planned strategy. And we don"t necessarily want lucky players winning this event, we want players who have best adapted to the format.
That aside, the objective of this event is to introduce tournament players (70% of all players) to cash. The fact that they"re playing with cash chips (so real value), fixed antes, the occasional straddle and the fact that they can stand up at any point and walk away with the money in front of them is more than enough to achieve this objective. I don"t think we need to allow unlimited reloads also. If anything, this will frighten some tournament players from giving the format a try.
4) Last longer.
I would award 100% of the last longer fees to the winner. A high percentage of players in this format will walk away with money - certainly far more than in a tournament (although some of those may walk away with less than they entered with). For me, we shouldn"t incentivise anyone to finish second.
Those points aside, I"ve been really pleased with the success of the format. Those who"ve played it, tend to strongly like it and offer opinions on how to improve it (always a good sign).
I thought John was a great winner at Aspers. Generally I wouldn"t like his mouthy approach in a normal APAT, but it seemed to be a useful tool in this event, and he won more by skill than luck. Particularly liked turning over the four in the hand against Sean that ultimately won him the bracelet. It was great theatre...and next year we just have to stream this event.