2025 Triton ONE

$8,000 Triton ONE Main Event
Day: 3
Event Info
2025 Triton ONE
Final Results
Winner
Winning Hand
87
Event Info
Buy-in
$8,000
Prize Pool
$7,607,558
Entries
1,046
Level Info
Level
35
Blinds
1,500,000 / 3,000,000
Ante
3,000,000
Players Info - Day 3
Entries
16
Players Left
1
Players Left 1 / 1046
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Joshua Gebissa Makes History and Wins Inaugural Triton ONE Main Event in Jeju ($975,225)

Level 35 : Blinds 1,500,000/3,000,000, 3,000,000 ante
Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event
Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event

The first-ever Triton ONE $8,000 Main Event has come to a thrilling conclusion at the Landing Casino inside of the five-star Jeju Shinhwa World resort. For the debut of the new mid-stakes tour launched by the world-renowned high-stakes brand, a gargantuan field of 1,046 emerged to produce a mammoth prize pool of $7,607,558 and the lion's share of that was up for grabs on the final day.

Heads-up play featured Thai entrepreneur Punnat Punsri and former football player Joshua Gebissa, a defensive midfielder with roots in Ethiopia who was active in the lower divisions in Germany and retired from the sport in 2019 at the young age of 24 years old.

When the dust had settled, Gebissa came out on top of a topsy-turvy duel to earn the first place prize of $975,225. His previously largest recorded live poker cash was only $40,099, and he also finished in the money in the opening Triton ONE $3,000 QQPK Genesis Event at the start of the festival.

This trademark victory is what most aspiring poker players can only dream of and a telltale story of how poker legends are made. It is made even sweeter by the fact that Gebissa won his entry through the satellite program of title sponsor QQPK and received an exclusive reward of $100,000 in tournament coins for the popular online poker app.

Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event
Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event

Runner-up Punsri eventually had to settle for a consolation prize of $1,205,775, an amount that may come in handy for the upcoming 2025 Triton Poker Super High Roller Series Jeju II which will unfold in the following two weeks. Some of the biggest names in the world of poker are expected to take part in more than a dozen high-stakes tournaments.

The businessman from Thailand and number one on the country's all-time money list according to The Hendon Mob database had already racked up more than $26.2 million in tournament cashes prior to this series , which included four Triton Poker Super High Roller Series titles between 2022 and 2025 including two titles this year in Jeju and Montenegro.

He is widely regarded as one of the most accomplished poker aficionados in the Asia-Pacific region and it was just fitting that he also made it to the heads-up stage of the first-ever Triton ONE Main Event on Jeju Island. During a break with three players left, Punsri was spotted chatting with Jason Koon in the nearby Short Deck Event but there wouldn't be a victorious ending this time. Instead, it was the boisterous German-speaking rail that had reason to celebrate on the final day of the first-ever Triton ONE stop in South Korea.

Final Table Result

PlaceWinnerCountryPrize (in USD)
1Joshua GebissaGermany$975,225*
2Punnat PunsriThailand$1,205,775*
3Daiki ShingaeJapan$573,000
4Ruogo WenChina$431,000
5Dajie ZhuoChina$328,000
6Artur MartirosianRussian Federation$241,300
7Kaoru KishimotoJapan$183,000
8Igor YaroshevskyyUkraine$130,558
9Sergei PetrushevskiiRussian Federation$101,700

*denotes deal of the final two players prior to the start of the heads-up

Gebissa entered the final day as one of the bigger stacks near the top of the leaderboard but was flying somewhat under the radar for most of the day until the crucial stages came about.

“The plan was to see how the table plays, how aggressive people are, if they’re more passive, and then adjust accordingly.”

He is a rather new face on the live poker circuit with his first small cash dating back to March 2020 before he became more active three years later including a debut visit to Asia earlier this year.

“When you’re in-game, you’re really just so focused. I mean, for me especially, I’m not playing much live, so I have to count out the stacks all the time and really concentrate to get the numbers right and everything. So that kind of helps with the nerves.”

Throughout the entire duration of the final day, Gebissa appeared very composed at the tables and didn't seem to be intimidated by the big names he was up against despite the lack of high-stakes live poker action. It culminated in the heads-up duel with Punsri, who he had shared the table with the previous day.

“Yesterday we already played a bit at the table. I didn’t know him personally before. This is my first-ever visit to Jeju, so usually I just see him on stream … So I realized he’s actually a very nice guy. He was really nice to play with. He’s kind of a legend of the game. Playing heads-up versus him for a big trophy, can’t get much better than this I think.”

Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event
Joshua Gebissa wins the 2025 Triton ONE Jeju Main Event

Action of the Final Day

The final day recommenced with 16 players remaining spread evenly across the two feature tables and there was a pay jump in play. Ming Juen Teoh was the shortest stack and doubled in the very first hand before securing another double soon after. The Malaysian was then also responsible for the first elimination when his pocket sixes held against the ace-king of Takashi Yagura.

While the action thereafter slowed down, the following out became a frantic affair with five eliminations to bring the field down to ten in a hurry. Weiran Pu was the first to fall when his ace-queen ended up second-best to the ace-seven of Dajie Zhuo. In another clash of players from China, Hongjun Zhao came up short with pocket tens against the ace-king of Ruogo Wen.

Yuefeng Pan, who had started the day with the lead, had to settle for 13th place after losing a flip to Daiki Shingae and became the third Chinese hope to leave empty-handed. Ruogo Wen then knocked out Teoh and Chao Li in consecutive hands to bring the field down to the final table bubble. Artur Martirosian and Punsri secured several double-ups after spending time in the danger zone and the latter then knocked out Michael Zhang to set up the final nine.

The very first hand of the final table provided fireworks when Sergei Petrushevskii picked up ace-king and three-bet. He spiked top pair and top kicker to jam the turn only to walk right into the slow-played pocket aces of Punsri.

Igor Yaroshevskyy became the next player to depart. He was a big stack after the bubble for an extended period on Day 2 but entered the final table among the short stacks. In three-way action, Yaroshevskyy flopped trips eights only for Wen to hit running jacks for what would end up being a superior full house. Yaroshevskyy used multiple time bank extensions and then called all-in to get shown the bad news.

That elimination ensured a pay jump for fellow short stack Kaoru Kishimoto, who bowed out only a few minutes later. In a duel of players from Japan, Kishimoto defended the king-nine from the big blind and jammed on a gutshot straight draw. Shingae looked him up with ace-king and was already ahead, then rivered an ace to deal the final blow.

The action was now more deep-stacked and the always dangerous Martirosian picked up chips with a five-bet shove against Wen with ace-king versus ace-jack. When the Russian poker prodigy got into a preflop raising war again, he picked a bad timing for his six-bet shove with ace-three suited, as Punsri looked him up with ace-king to take over the lead five-handed.

Artur Martirosian
Artur Martirosian

That lead grew to half of the chips in play with the elimination of Zhuo, who flopped top pair with king-jack in three-way action. The relentlessly aggressive Punsri had the goods once again with ace-jack and pulled further ahead of the pack.

Next to depart was Wen in a preflop flip with king-queen suited against the pocket sixes of Shingae, who pulled way ahead of Gebissa with three times as many chips. The shortest stack among the final three still had a mighty 30 big blinds at his disposal, though.

Shingae took over the lead three-handed and even pulled further ahead but it all went down in flames when he bluffed in a big pot against Punsri. The Thai hero-called correctly to leap into a commanding lead and the misery for Shingae got even worse soon after when Gebissa doubled through him. Ultimately, Shingae busted with pocket kings against Gebissa's ace-queen when the latter rivered broadway.

Joshua Gebissa and Daiki Shingae
Joshua Gebissa and Daiki Shingae

While Punsri entered heads-up play with a comfortable cushion, it was certainly no one-way traffic. Gebissa doubled twice in what was a cagey affair and then wrestled his way into an overwhelming lead. Punsri earned back-to-back doubles with a severe short stack but the miracle comeback was cut short to once again send Punsri to the rail just shy of another triumph in his impressive poker career.

This concludes the PokerNews live reporting from the first Triton ONE Main Event in Jeju, which has entered the world of mid-stakes poker with tremendous prize pools, set for a very bright and ambitious future.

Tags: Artur MartirosianChao LiDaiki ShingaeDajie ZhuoHongjun ZhaoIgor YaroshevskyyJoshua GebissaKaoru KishimotoMichael ZhangMing Juen TeohPunnat PunsriRuogo WenSergei PetrushevskiiTakashi YaguraWeiran PuYuefeng Pan

Punnat Punsri Eliminated in 2nd Place ($1,205,775)

Level 35 : Blinds 1,500,000/3,000,000, 3,000,000 ante
Punnat Punsri
Punnat Punsri

Joshua Gebissa limped in from the button and Punnat Punsri checked his option to the A74 flop on which Punsri checked, Gebissa bet 3,000,000 and Punsri called.

The 5 followed on the turn and Punsri checked once more. Gebissa now bet 10,500,000 and the Thai pushed all-in for 43,200,000. Gebissa asked for a count and called after brief consideration.

Punnat Punsri: J6 All in
Joshua Gebissa: 87

Both players were on their feet, Punsri right at the table while Gebissa walked back to his German rail.

The river was the Q and Gebissa was embraced by his rail before he shook hands with Punsri. According to the deal prior to the start of the heads-up duel, Punsri earned the larger cash prize of $1,205,775 while Gebissa became the first-ever Triton ONE Main Event champion with a payday of $975,225.

A recap of today's action is to follow.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joshua Gebissa at
Joshua Gebissa
265,800,000
50,400,000
50,400,000
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
Busted
Natural8

Tags: Joshua GebissaPunnat Punsri

Punsri Bluffs Three Streets Into Top Two

Level 34 : Blinds 1,200,000/2,400,000, 2,400,000 ante
Punnat Punsri
Punnat Punsri

Joshua Gebissa completed on the button with KQ and Punnat Punsri checked his big blind option with 93.

Punsri bet 6,200,000 on the flop of 6QK and Gebissa called. Punsri sized up to 18,000,000 on the 2 turn and Gebissa again called.

Punsri could only win by bluffing on the J river and moved all in as Gebissa snapped him off with top two pair to double.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
132,000,000
66,000,000
66,000,000
Natural8
Profile photo of Joshua Gebissa at
Joshua Gebissa
129,000,000
66,000,000
66,000,000

Tags: Joshua GebissaPunnat Punsri

Daiki Shingae Eliminated in 3rd Place ($573,000)

Level 31 : Blinds 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Daiki Shingae
Daiki Shingae

Daiki Shingae open-jammed on the button and Joshua Gebissa re-shoved in the small blind.

Daiki Shingae: KK All in
Joshua Gebissa: AQ

Shingae's kings couldn't stay ahead for another double as the board ran out J86 and the K improved Shingae to a set, slightly improving Gebissa's outs with a gutshot. The dealer then put down the 10 river to give Gebissa Broadway to deliver a crushing beat to Shingae.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Joshua Gebissa at
Joshua Gebissa
56,000,000
6,400,000
6,400,000
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
Busted

Tags: Daiki ShingaeJoshua Gebissa

Punsri Scores Huge Double Through Shingae

Level 31 : Blinds 600,000/1,200,000, 1,200,000 ante
Punnat Punsri
Punnat Punsri

Daiki Shingae opened to 2,400,000 on the button with a QQPK mystery hand and Punnat Punsri three-bet big to 14,000,000 with K5 in the big blind, Shingae came along to the Q72 flop. The continuation bet of Punsri for 10,000,000 was called by Shingae.

On the 5 turn, Punsri paired up his five and opted to check, which prompted a quick bet worth 15,000,000 by Shingae. Punsri needed some time to consider his next move and then called to see the 2 on the river with a pot of nearly the average stack.

Punsri checked again and Shingae emptied the clip with a shove for 92,800,000. That sent the Thai into the tank and he tossed in a time bank extension right away, glanced at the stack of Joshua Gebissa and then examined his stack. Another time bank went into the middle and he then called.

Shingae rolled over the 86 for a huge bluff and Punsri celebrated his big double to regain a now commanding lead.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
188,600,000
94,000,000
94,000,000
Natural8
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
38,400,000
91,000,000
91,000,000
Profile photo of Joshua Gebissa at
Joshua Gebissa
34,600,000
3,000,000
3,000,000

Tags: Daiki ShingaeJoshua GebissaPunnat Punsri

Ruogo Wen Eliminated in 4th Place ($431,000)

Level 30 : Blinds 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante
Ruogu Wen
Ruogu Wen

Ruogo Wen opened to 2,000,000 on the button and Punnat Punsri called in the small blind before Daiki Shingae three-bet to 6,500,000 in the big blind. Wen four-bet jammed for 26,800,000 and Punsri folded as Shingae called.

Ruogo Wen: KQ All in
Daiki Shingae: 66

Wen couldn't win the flip as the board ran out 232A8 to mark his elimination in fourth place for $431,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
136,000,000
3,300,000
3,300,000
Natural8
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
95,000,000
28,800,000
28,800,000
Profile photo of Ruogo Wen cn
Ruogo Wen
Busted

Tags: Daiki ShingaePunnat PunsriRuogo Wen

Dajie Zhuo Eliminated in 5th Place ($328,000)

Level 30 : Blinds 500,000/1,000,000, 1,000,000 ante
Dajie Zhuo
Dajie Zhuo

Punnat Punsri opened to 2,300,000 on the button and Daiki Shingae called in the small blind as Dajie Zhuo called in the big blind.

Action checked to Punsri on the flop of J25 and he continued for 2,600,000. Shingae folded and Zhuo check-raised to 7,500,000. Punsri three-bet to 14,000,000 and Zhuo four-bet jammed for 44,700,000. Punsri called with more.

Dajie Zhuo: KJ All in
Punnat Punsri: AJ

Zhuo was pipped and got no help from the runout of 99 to go out in fifth place for $328,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
132,700,000
50,300,000
50,300,000
Natural8
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
66,200,000
2,300,000
2,300,000
Profile photo of Dajie Zhuo cn
Dajie Zhuo
Busted

Tags: Daiki ShingaeDajie ZhuoPunnat Punsri

Artur Martirosian Eliminated in 6th Place ($241,300)

Level 29 : Blinds 400,000/800,000, 800,000 ante
Artur Martirosian
Artur Martirosian

Artur Martirosian opened to 1,600,000 in the cutoff and Punnat Punsri three-bet on the button to 5,200,000.

Martirosian clicked it back to 10,800,000 and Punsri re-clicked with a five-bet to 16,500,000. Martirosian six-bet jammed for 37,200,000 and Punsri called.

Artur Martirosian: A3 All in
Punnat Punsri: AK

Martirosian had the inferior kicker by about a dozen pips and nothing changed on the runout of Q10Q72 and Martirosian was eliminated in sixth place as Punsri clutched his lucky stuffed animal in victory.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Punnat Punsri th
Punnat Punsri
78,000,000
36,800,000
36,800,000
Natural8
Profile photo of Artur Martirosian ru
Artur Martirosian
Busted
EPT Main Event Champion
WSOP 3X Winner
EPT 1X Winner

Tags: Artur MartirosianPunnat Punsri

Kaoru Kishimoto Eliminated in 7th Place ($183,000)

Level 29 : Blinds 400,000/800,000, 800,000 ante
Kaoru Kishimoto
Kaoru Kishimoto

Daiki Shingae raised to 1,600,000 with the AK and Kaoru Kishimoto called out of the big blind with what was dubbed as the QQPK mystery hand leading up to the QJ5 flop. Kishimoto checked and Shingae bet 2,100,000 for his fellow countryman to then shove for 10,600,000 total.

"How much?" Shingae asked upon and then reluctantly called. Kishimoto flipped over the K9 for an inferior straight draw and needed to hit a nine to survvie.

The turn was the Q and the A river sealed the fate of Kishimoto in seventh place for a payday of $183,000.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
56,400,000
11,200,000
11,200,000
Profile photo of Kaoru Kishimoto jp
Kaoru Kishimoto
Busted

Tags: Daiki ShingaeKaoru Kishimoto

Igor Yaroshevskyy Eliminated in 8th Place ($130,558)

Level 29 : Blinds 400,000/800,000, 800,000 ante
Igor Yaroshevskyy
Igor Yaroshevskyy

Ruogo Wen opened to 1,800,000 in middle position with QJ and Daiki Shingae called on the button with AQ and Igor Yaroshevskyy came along in the big blind with 87.

The flop of 889 checked through and Yaroshevskyy bet 2,300,000 on the J turn. Wen called and Shingae folded.

Yaroshevskyy checked on the devastating J river and Wen moved all in to put Yaroshevskyy to the test for his remaining 6,600,000. Yaroshevskyy used several time banks before calling and seeing the bad news as he was eliminated in eighth place for $130,558.

Player Chips Progress
Profile photo of Ruogo Wen cn
Ruogo Wen
56,000,000
15,400,000
15,400,000
Profile photo of Daiki Shingae jp
Daiki Shingae
43,000,000
2,200,000
2,200,000
Profile photo of Igor Yaroshevskyy ua
Igor Yaroshevskyy
Busted

Tags: Daiki ShingaeIgor YaroshevskyyRuogo Wen

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