As you can see from this list, Finland's Jani Sointula is flying with 73,000 chips while Charlie Carrel's not having a bad day himself with 67,500 chips in front of him.
Anthony Zinno (35,400) and Byron Kaverman (16,200) are battling it out in the Global Poker Index Player of the Year race and are having different days here, with Kaverman down to around half of his starting stack.
Level 4 has ended and that means the second scheduled break of the day is upon us. When the players return, they'll play two more levels before heading off for a 75-minute dinner break.
Liviu Ignat opened to 500 from the button and both Maxim Panyak, in the small blind, and Faraz Jaka, in the big blind, called.
Both blinds checked to Ignat on the flop, with Ignat betting 650. Panyak responded with a check-raise to 2,025, which folded out Jaka and Ignat rather quickly.
Daniel Dvoress stared down Ole Schemion as he awaited the German's move on the board. Schemion, on the button, made it 1,500 to continue and Dvoress called.
The river put four cards to a straight on the board and Dvoress bet 4,600. Schemion instantly folded, leaving Dvoress to climb to 40,000 chips.
It appears the USA's William Foxen is the big stack at the moment with just over 100,000. It'd have been even more than that if not for losing a pot to Faraz Jaka, who just finished runner-up in PokerStars' Super Tuesday.
We picked up the action with around 8,000 in the pot and a board reading . Foxen put out a bet of 5,375 and Jaka hit the tank before dropping in a call. Foxen showed the , but it was no good as Jaka had outflopped him with the .
Mustapha Kanit raised to 550 from middle position and Oleh Okhotskyi called from the big blind. The flop saw Okhotskyi check and Kanit bet 650, which soon became 1,500 after Okhotskyi woke up with a check-raise. Kanit made the call and then both players checked the turn as well as the river.
Okhotskyi tabled the for two pair, and it was good as Kanit mucked.
David Peters is approaching 60,000 chips thanks to sending Denmark's Alexandru Papazian to the sidelines.
All of the chips went flying into the middle of a flop, Papazian holding and Peters the . A turn and river reading and sent Papazian to the showers and Peters towards the top of the chip counts.
Donnacha O'Dea has sent Greece's Avzamidid Makarios to the rail after turning the nut straight against him.
O'Dea checked from the big blind on the board, Makarios bet 2,500 and then called off the rest of his chips when O'Dea check-raised to 10,000. Makarios showed and needed an eight or six to beat the of O'Dea. The river was the , and Makarios' tournament ended.