Shi Rong Wang
The opening day of the APT Taipei 2025 exceeded expectations right out of the gate. The multi-day APT National Cup, that boasted a guaranteed TWD 10 million (~US$307,000) prize pool was no match for the poker-hungry crowd, as 2,161 entries across three Day 1 flights inflated the total prize pool to an astonishing TWD 21,264,240 (~US$656,000)—more than doubling the original guarantee.
Ending at the top of what became the richest-ever opening event in APT history was Taiwan’s Shi Rong Wang, who took home the title, the TWD 3,804,240 (~USD 106,612) first-place prize, and an APT Championship ticket for the ATPC Main Event in November, worth TWD 350,000.
Wang defeated Huan Yu Chen in a heads-up battle that spanned over two levels, securing his name in the APT history books. This win marks Wang’s largest career score by tenfold, showcasing his stellar final table performance.
Final Table Results
*Includes a TWD 350,000 APT Championship Main Event ticket
A total of 302 players took their seats for Day 2, each securing a minimum cash of TWD 18,000 (~$338). Jason Cooper, from the United Kingdom, started the day with the largest stack, but unfortunately for Cooper, he was unable to maintain his lead and finished in 39th place for TWD 68,000. After around six hours of play, the field was reduced to nine players. Ta Wei Wei became the final table bubble boy when his king-five was unable to improve against Wang Shao Fu’s ace-nine.
When the final table began, Chen, the eventual runner-up, and Wang were virtually neck and neck at the top of the chip counts, with a significant gap between them and the rest of the players. Chen scored the first final table knockout, eliminating Sung Sik Eum in ninth place after flopping trip nines against Eum’s underpair. Chen’s stack surged to nearly 20,000,000, giving him control of nearly a third of the chips in play with eight players remaining.
However, Chen’s reign was cut short after Wang’s top set was paid off on the river by Chen. This pot put Wang in pole position, and he extended his lead by sending Weilien Chiang to the rail in eighth place, again using pocket jacks to win the pot.
Weilien Chiang
Next to fall was Taiwan’s Cheng Chih Cheng in seventh position after his wheel-ace failed to beat the two nines of Fu. Wang’s dream run continued as he faded almost half the deck with pocket sevens against Chin Kai Liao’s two overcards and flush draw, sending Liao to the cashier’s desk in sixth place.
The only female player at the table, Yi-Chun Liu from Taiwan, was forced to vacate her seat in fifth after her pocket treys lost a race to Lee Tian Yu’s king-queen. Wang then scored another knockout with pocket sevens, after shoving blind-on-blind and holding against Lee, who called off his tournament like with ace-four.
Yi-Chun Liu
Shao Fu Weng had maneuvered his way up the pay ladder magnificently, but he was unable to survive any longer in the tournament after some misfortune from the dealer secured his departure from the National Cup t in third place.
When heads-up play began, Wang held a 2:1 chip lead and steadily increased it with aggressive play. Wang eventually sealed the win when he flopped two pair against Chen’s bottom pair. A sweaty turn gave Chen some hope, but the clean river meant Wang was crowned the APT National Cup Champion, bagging TWD 3,804,240 (~USD 106,612) plus a seat at the APT Championship Main Event in Taipei later this year.
Shi Rong Wang