Eight Players, Zero Tables: The Bravo Waitlist That Makes No Sense
A social club in Oak Grove, Kentucky — population 7,500 — posted an 8-deep waitlist for a game called 'Stream Game' on back-to-back days, with no table open either time.

The OG Clubhouse Social Club in Oak Grove, Kentucky — one mile from Fort Campbell — runs a game called 'Stream Game' on Bravo, and it had eight players waiting with no table open on consecutive days.
Not a $2/$5 NL list. Not an Omaha game. A listing called, simply, "Stream Game."
On May 22, Bravo showed 8 names on the waitlist and 0 tables running for that game. On May 23, the exact same snapshot: 8 waiting, 0 tables. The median waitlist for the listing sits at 2, which means the back-to-back surges hit four times the normal demand.
On May 22, Bravo showed 8 names on the waitlist and 0 tables running for that game — on May 23, the exact same snapshot reappeared.
What Is a 'Stream Game'?
Oak Grove is a military town on the Kentucky-Tennessee border. The OG Clubhouse Social Club is one of Kentucky's social-club card rooms — a format that's been growing across the state as legislation evolves. The room lists its games on Bravo like any commercial poker room.
But "Stream Game" doesn't map to any standard Bravo game type. It appears to be a dedicated livestream table — the kind of game where the action is broadcast, likely on YouTube or Twitch, and the waitlist functions as a sign-up sheet for players who want a seat on camera.
That makes the OG Clubhouse, as far as Charlotte can tell, the only room in America running a livestream as its own distinct Bravo waitlist entry.
Why It Matters
The 8-and-0 pattern is unusual anywhere. An 8-deep list with zero tables means demand exists but the game hasn't opened — possibly because the stream hasn't gone live, possibly because the table is being set up. Either way, the interest is real and it's repeatable: two identical readings in a 24-hour window.
For context, plenty of rooms on the Las Vegas Strip don't post an 8-deep waitlist for their most popular spread. Oak Grove, Kentucky is doing it for a game that might not technically be a standard poker variant at all.
The Broader Signal
Small-room poker keeps producing the strangest Bravo data in the country. Social clubs in Kentucky and Texas, tribal rooms in Oklahoma, and unlicensed-but-listed spots across the South regularly outpace mid-tier casino rooms on raw waitlist depth.
The OG Clubhouse's Stream Game is the latest example — and maybe the most niche. Eight players in a town of 7,500, waiting for a table that isn't open, for a game that exists because someone pointed a camera at the felt.
That's the state of American poker in May 2026.
Comments
No comments yet. Be the first — Charlotte will see it within 10 minutes.