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koen roos world record

It’s pretty much the ultimate dream, right? Take a break from work, travel the world, and play poker almost anywhere you feel like.

For recreational player Koen Roos, that dream became a reality in 2025.

The Dutchman racked up an astonishing 50 flags in a single calendar year to top The Hendon Mob’s annual Flag Hunter race, and now he hopes to have it officially recognized as a new world record after surpassing Dominick French’s count of 48 in 2024.

With cashes stretching from Cambodia to Côte d’Ivoire, and everywhere in between, it naturally begs the questions: What? Why? And just how is that even possible?

Well, PokerNews wanted to find out, so we sat down with Roos to discover how on earth he managed it and whether card-inspired globetrotting is really as fun as it sounds.

A Chance Meeting With a Legend

To discover how a recreational poker player becomes a full-time flag hunter, it makes sense to go back to the start. In a story that will be familiar to many, Roos explains that he fell in love with the game after his friends became concerned about his slightly unhealthy obsession with online gaming.

“I was at a friend’s, we were gaming all the time, and his sister and brother-in-law said, ‘We need to get you from behind the screen.’ So we started playing poker for very small stakes. It developed into a home game group. We were playing €5 tournaments until seven in the morning because we were just enjoying it so much.”

After months of crushing home games, it was time to take on the wider Dutch poker fraternity, where Roos discovered his kitchen-table education had stood him in pretty good stead. “There was a cafe nearby that ran €10 and €20 tournaments, and when we entered, we were like, ‘We’re beating these guys pretty hard,’” he laughs.

The Japan Poker Open in Tokyo.
The Japan Poker Open in Tokyo.

The next step was the Holland Casino, where Roos finished 3rd in his first-ever official tournament and won €3,300 after a three-way deal, describing it as “huge money because I was still in high school.” It’s safe to say he’d caught the poker bug.

After years of playing and enjoying the game in his homeland, Roos says the idea of flag hunting “developed gradually,” but really started to take hold after a chance encounter with the late poker legend Casey Kastle.

“I met him by coincidence in Austria,” says Roos, referring to the respected Slovenian pro who became the first player in poker history to record 50 cashes across 50 different countries before his passing in 2024.

From that moment, a new hobby took shape. “I decided to go for niche countries. I got Monaco and Norway in 2024, and then I planned a vacation to New Zealand and thought, while I’m there, I should get New Zealand and Australia too.”

Chasing the Record

With his ambition now set, Roos, an IT consultant in his everyday life, identified 2025 as the year to have a full tilt at the record.

He explains, “I’m in IT consultancy, and normally January is very dry if your project ends in December. My manager said, ‘If you want, you can just take January off.’ I’m single and I don’t have a pet, so if I’m going to do it, I’m going to do it now.”

With the logistics of such a challenge almost as difficult as the feat itself, Roos says, “I created a tier list for countries I had to prioritize. Monaco and Norway only happen once a year, so you have to put those ahead of somewhere like the UK.”

Olhares da Paz in São Paolo
Olhares da Paz in São Paolo.

While certain stops are penciled in well in advance, many events, especially the smaller ones, will only announce tournaments “one or two months in advance, not half a year.”

With that in mind, and January booked off, Roos’s only option was to “go all in early and just see where it would take me,” he says as we discuss the year’s first stops in East Asia.

“When you cash, most people go to sleep. I’m in my hotel room searching flights and figuring out where I can go next.”

Early momentum came quickly, with cashes in Japan, Cambodia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and South Korea, alongside tournament victories in Vietnam and Taiwan, all packed into a remarkable 20-day period.

“In Japan, I planned three days, but it took five. Then Cambodia reduced its starting days, so plans changed again. You have to adapt constantly,” he says with a surgical precision. “When you cash, most people go to sleep. I’m in my hotel room searching flights and figuring out where I can go next.”

Firmly on course after a strong start, Costa Rica soon followed, alongside a constant stream of cashes across Europe in the first half of the year. Reflecting on the day-to-day reality of flag hunting and how it fit around work commitments, Roos explains, “My project only required me to be in the office on Mondays, so I’d fly out Monday or Tuesday evening, play evenings and weekends, and work from the hotel room.”

However, by the year’s midway mark, and still on pace for the record, Roos decided to fully commit and took a three-month sabbatical before embarking on a trip to South America.

The Relentless Grind

Unlike cigarettes, which carry a health warning, no tournament buy-in ever came labeled ‘Warning: this game may seriously damage your mental health,’ yet it’s a feeling every poker player knows all too well.

Genting Highlands, Malaysia.
Genting Highlands, Malaysia.

When asked about the mental and physical toll that comes from such a relentless schedule of travelling and tournament poker, Roos admits, “It’s very tiring, but I’ve had a good run, so that helps. Outside Europe, I only missed three countries. You’re committed, so you don’t really have an option. If there are two more days of tournaments, you’re just going to play.”

“You’re committed, so you don’t really have an option.”

The pressure of jetting off to a far-flung land, time and resources not unlimited, and knowing you have to cash is one that will be understood by only a select group of players.

Reflecting on his South American excursion, Roos says, “Paraguay was such a hassle. Five hours by taxi to get there and eight hours by bus to leave. The pressure is real in places like that. After bubbling once and soft bubbling twice, getting the flag in the last event was such a relief.”

A Year Well Spent

Overall, however, Roos is very upbeat about his record-breaking year and beams as he shares some of the highlights from his jet-setting exploits.

After 50 cashes, and playing in more tournaments besides, he says, “Monaco [EPT Monte Carlo] and the Bahamas [WSOP Paradise] are huge events and very well put together, but Iceland was six tables and amazing vibes. People were just happy you were there.”

“Sometimes the country itself is the highlight. I love New Zealand,” he says, having cashed there late in 2024 alongside Australia. Since both fell within a 12-month period rather than a single calendar year, they could potentially be added to the official Guinness World Records, bringing his total to 52.

It’s also a buzz bumping into other members of the small but deeply passionate flag-hunting community. “Running into other flag hunters is always fun. I ran into Dominick [French] in Ecuador without even knowing he was playing there,” adds Roos.

So, what’s next? More of the same? Kind of, says Roos, but not exactly.

“My long-term goal is to get to 100 total flags over the next ten years, mostly during my vacation.” If 2025 was anything to go by, you wouldn’t bet against him.

Koen Roos.
Koen Roos

Koen Roos’s Record-Breaking 2025 in Cashes

# Date Country Event Place Payout
1 Jan 5th Japan JOPT Megastack
2 Jan 8th Taiwan TMT Daily Deepstacks 1st NT$20,700
3 Jan 11th Cambodia Huione Poker League 7th $1,200
4 Jan 14th Vietnam Saigon Poker Club Hyper Tuesday 1st ₫21,274,000
5 Jan 19th Malaysia Poker Dream 15 Deepstack 41st RM2,300
6 Jan 22nd Philippines Manila Megastack Mystery Bounty 6th ₱85,000
7 Jan 25th South Korea ASPT Korea Morning Turbo 5th KRW1,400,000
8 Feb 2nd Costa Rica CR Turbo 4th $1,085
9 Feb 5th Netherlands Utrecht Poker Series Turbo 7th €1,658
10 Mar 6th Scotland Glasgow Poker Festival Thursday 3rd £1,280
11 Mar 11th Poland Montownia Rozrywhi Club NLH 1st zł219
12 Mar 21st Slovenia Balkan Poker Circuit Deep Friday 1st €1,360
13 Mar 26th North Macedonia Balkan Poker Championship BPC Main Event 116th €725
14 Apr 3rd Austria CAPT Salzburg Main Event 27th €1,460
15 Apr 17th Denmark Easter Tour Main Event 30th DKr5,500
16 Apr 23rd Estonia Betsafe Festival WKND Main Event 10th €640
17 May 5th Italy IPO San Remo Regular 3rd €700
18 May 9th Monaco EPT Monte-Carlo 1st €18,650
19 May 22nd Lithuania OlyBet Showdown Vilnius Progressive Bounty 3rd €1,270
20 Jun 7th Iceland Midnight Sun Poker 3rd Íkr120,000
21 Jun 11th Czech Republic Festival in Rozvadov 8-Game 2nd €2,916
22 Jun 17th Albania La Notte Degli Assi Win The Button #2 8th €600
23 Jun 20th Cyprus Chamada Poker Series Win the Button 9th $960
24 Jun 26th Greece Greek Poker Odyssea Main Event 49th €1,206
25 Jul 5th Spain TexaPoker SharkBay Goblin Shark 100 13th €200
26 Jul 6th Andorra Mini Mensual 5th €237
27 Jul 10th Liechtenstein Bounty Hunter Days Summer Festival 77th SFr370
28 Jul 14th Hungary Duna Poker Centre Recurring Tournaments 6th Ft170,280
29 Jul 15th Slovakia Lucky Sevens 56th €245
30 Jul 22nd Portugal VPT Troia Warm Up Event #1 21st €400
31 Jul 25th Brazil BSOP São Paulo Winter Millions 8 Game 6th R$6,050
32 Aug 6th Uruguay Enjoy Poker Tour Second Chance 5th $13,920
33 Aug 11th Argentina Madero Poker Bounty 3rd $906
34 Aug 17th Paraguay 7 Saltos Poker League Second Chance 2nd R$4,750
35 Aug 20th Colombia Winner Poker Series Open 63rd Col$1,200,000
36 Aug 29th United States WSOPC New Orleans Ring Event #13 2nd $9,703
36 Aug 30th United States WSOPC New Orleans Ring Event #15 1st $8,030
37 Aug 30th Ecuador Ecuadorian Poker Series Bounty 9th $200
38 Sep 12th Mexico Palace Poker M$100,000 Guaranteed 1st M$24,000
39 Sep 14th Dominican Republic CLSOP Open 1st $7,770
40 Sep 21st Morocco Unibet Deepstack Open Turbo Deepstack 4th درهم14,500
41 Sep 24th Latvia OlyBet Showdown Voodoo Autumn Edition 1st €2,970
42 Sep 27th Norway Norwegian Poker Championships Event #1 19th kr17,500
43 Sep 30th Georgia EAPT Georgia Progressive Bounty 1st $3,465
44 Oct 5th Belgium Oktoberfest Namur The Closer Hyper Turbo 2nd €665
45 Oct 6th Finland Finnish Open Championship Terminator 8th €1,482
46 Oct 8th Bulgaria VPT Sofia High Roller 18th €1,400
47 Oct 17th France SharkBay Whale Shark 150 KO 2nd €960
48 Oct 22nd Ireland IPO Dublin Nightly NLH Bounty Event #6 8th €130
49 Oct 30th Malta MPF Bounty Hunter Days Malta 56th €210
49 Nov 3rd Malta MPF 8 Game Event 2nd €2,000
50 Nov 13th Serbia Vision Poker League Recurring Tournaments 3rd RSD45,000

Photos courtesy of Koen Roos.

Eliot Thomas

Editor, Poker & Casino

Eliot Thomas is an Editor at PokerNews, specializing in casino and poker coverage. He has reported on major events around the world, including the World Series of Poker, European Poker Tour, and Triton Super High Roller Series.





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