I see a lot of flaws in your thinking. For one, big stacks all play differently. Some can just sit back, let the smaller stacks fight it out, and then wait untill they make the money or close to it, and they have a good position to get more chips.
Some big stacks play very aggressive, like you explained. But those players arn't playing the big stack properly. Because most big stacks, play selective agressive. Meaning that they pick there spots to be agressive, and if they get into a conflict with a smaller stack, they can be in a good position to knock them out. They play a wide range of hands that have a lot of 'flop potential'. Meaning suited connectors, small pocket pairs, high cards, connectors, high suited cards, etc.
I have been playing for quite some time now, and I find most big stacks play that way. Because no one wants to get into a conflict with a bigger stack.
But the reason why big stacks bully other smaller stacks is because there's usually a prize close, and everyone wants to make the money. So they use that to there advantage, and makes them get more chips. And by the time a smaller stack stands up for themselfs, they got so much chips from the blinds that they are basically freerolling. Meaning that if you started with 100k as a big stack, blinds at 500/1,000. You have stolen 5 rounds of blinds, meaning you have an extra 7,500 in chips. You keep raising to 4x-5x the BB from 4,000-5,000 chips. After one hand, a shorter stack moves all in. You can either call them, or fold. If you fold, you still have extra chips from just the blinds even after losing that big bet.
So bascially, the big stacks use agression to there advantage because no one could fight back, even if they wanted to. It would be very hard to fight back at a big stack bully without them fighting right back.
Want a real challenge? PM me about the Chris Ferguson challenge! (which I can now say I have completed myself!)
"I came into this world against my consent, and I will leave this world against my will." -Phil Laak
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