Kit Kwan Chun - APT Taipei 2025 Zodiac Classic Champion
Hong Kong’s Kit Kwan Chun has won the historic TWD 80,000 APT Taipei 2025 Zodiac Classic, besting a record-breaking field of 626 entries (457 unique). He stood last to claim the iconic APT Lion Trophy, the top prize of TWD 8,222,620 ($253,785), and an APTC Main Event Ticket worth TWD 350,000. With an 8:1 lead, he defeated two-time APT Main Event Champion Lester Edoc in a very quick heads-up match. Edoc banked TWD 5,116,000 ($157,900) for his runner-up finish.
This tournament, boasting a prize pool of TWD 43,770,000 (~USD 1.37 million), smashed the previous high of 386 entries set during APT Taipei 2023. The prize pool surged to an eye-popping TWD 43,770,000 (USD 1.37 million), more than doubling the previous benchmark of TWD 20,000,000 ($775,055).
Final Table Action
It was a sad day for Meng Ting Hsieh, who got eliminated just shy of the biggest Zodiac Classic prize pool when his pocket queens fell to Hsuan-Yu Lai’s kings. Lai flopped a pair that improved to a set on the river, making Hsieh the unfortunate money bubble.
Once the bubble burst, it took about seven hours to reach the final table. Ngoc Minh Le from Vietnam was eliminated one spot away from the final nine after jamming all-in with ace-seven offsuit. He was dominated by Edoc’s ace-jack suited. Edoc, ahead from the start, flopped a pair and improved to trips on the river, sealing Le’s fate.
The final table only took three hours to finish. The first casualty was Kuan Yu Lin from Taiwan, who called Chun’s all-in with ace-king suited, unaware that the champion was holding pocket aces. Chun’s aces held through the runout, ushering Lin out of the tournament with TWD 699,500 (~$21,590) for ninth place.
Jihwan Oh Eliminated in eighth place
Jihwan Oh from South Korea soon followed after finding himself in a three-way all-in with monster stacks belonging to Chun and Edoc. Squeezed between the two chip leaders, Oh went all-in with ace-queen and got called by Chun, holding ace-king offsuit, and Edoc with pocket jacks. Chun rivered a king to win the main pot, while Edoc scooped the side pot, sending Oh out in eighth place with TWD 888,500 (~$27,420).
Nattawat Soontanont of Thailand, who had been consistent throughout the day, was felted when he shoved all-in with ace-jack offsuit against Chun’s ace-queen. Chun flopped a pair to strengthen his lead, sending Soontanont to the payout counter to collect TWD 1,292,000 (~$39,880) for finishing in seventh place.
Chi Ho King Lai from Hong Kong had been navigating the final table well, carefully building his stack. However, his luck ran out when he pushed all-in with pocket nines and ran into Thailand's Tharit Nanthana’s pocket tens. With the better pair holding, Lai was eliminated in sixth place, earning TWD 1,747,000 (~$53,920).
Gab Kim in fifth place
South Korea’s Gab Kim, who entered the final day as chip leader, ended in fifth place when he went all-in on a paired board with ace-ten offsuit. Chun, holding ace-five, had flopped trips, leaving Kim drawing dead. He took home a respectable TWD 2,232,000 (~$68,890) for his finish.
The hand of the night came immediately after Kim’s elimination with a dramatic double knockout that propelled Chun even closer to the title. In the pivotal hand, Nanthana went all-in with ace-nine offsuit and was called by Grant Wang from the United States, who held pocket tens. Chun, also in the hand, raised all-in with pocket nines to put Wang at risk. Wang called, and the trio saw a flop where Chun hit a set of nines. That hand eliminated both Nanthana in fourth place and Wang in third, earning them TWD 2,832,500 ($87,420) and TWD 3,661,000 ($112,990), respectively.
Kit Kwan Chun and Lester Edoc in the Final Hand
And then there were two. The final hand took place just minutes later, with Edoc still riding the energy of the previous hand. After Chun raised, Edoc responded by jamming all-in with ace-queen suited. Chun quickly called with pocket fours. The board ran clean, and Chun’s pocket pair held, eliminating Edoc in second place for TWD 5,116,000 (~$157,900).
This left Kit Kwan Chun as the last man standing, taking home the top prize of TWD 8,222,620 (~$253,785)—the biggest cash of his poker career.
Congratulations to all!