Money-Making Spots and Money-Burning Spots in Poker
Poker profit comes less from flashy hero moments and more from stepping into the right recurring structures. This guide breaks down where money tends to pile up and where it most often gets burned.
Blog
Leia a ideia principal primeiro e, se quiser praticar mais, siga para as licoes relacionadas do Study.
Poker profit comes less from flashy hero moments and more from stepping into the right recurring structures. This guide breaks down where money tends to pile up and where it most often gets burned.
Bet sizing is not just about whether your hand is strong. It changes depending on whether you want to deny weak equity, charge draws, or push bluff-catchers into folds.
Hands like AKo, AQs, JJ, and TT are strong, but they are not automatic all-in calls in every spot. This guide explains why good-looking hands and good all-in calls are different things, and how to think about coinflips in practice.
MDF is not a chart you memorize for its own sake. It is a defense baseline that helps you understand why small bets require wider defense and big bets allow narrower defense.
Big blind defense and small blind defense are not the same problem. This guide explains why BB defends through price while SB often needs more aggressive resteal logic.
Dry boards and wet boards are not just visual labels. They change how often you can bet, how large you should size, and whether your turn plan still makes sense.
A-high, K-high, and Q-high dry boards are not the same auto-bet node. This guide turns range advantage, nut advantage, and check-back protection into a practical postflop playbook.
UTG and BTN opens are not the same skill. This playbook explains why early-position discipline removes domination risk while late-position expansion captures steal EV and positional value.
Strong players do not just learn isolated ideas. They connect opponent exploits, personal playbook rules, and review outputs into a loop that changes the next session.
The first real flop skill is not sizing. It is classification. If you can separate made hands, draws, and air, your flop decisions become much clearer.
GTO is not a magic answer sheet. It is a baseline. Exploit play is the skill of moving away from that baseline when opponents repeat real mistakes.
From ranks and suits to suited, offsuit, pocket pairs, and `AKs` style notation, this guide helps beginners read poker shorthand without hesitation.
A hand becomes much easier once you can instantly spot the button, the blinds, and who acts first on each street.
MDF and SPR are not separate trivia topics. Together they explain how often you defend, how big your hand really is in the pot, and when commitment becomes natural.
Poker actions become much easier when you separate actions that start pressure from actions that answer pressure.
Real range reading starts when hands stop being labels and start becoming actual remaining combinations.
You do not need advanced math to make better calls. You need a fast way to compare price, outs, and realistic improvement chances.
Who connects with the board more often is not always the same as who holds the strongest possible hands more often. You need both ideas to understand flop strategy.
River strategy is not about betting big when strong and checking when scared. It is about separating thin value from polar value and choosing bluffs through blocker quality and target ranges.
Not every draw should attack, and not every draw should only call. This framework separates monster draws, medium draws, and pair-plus-draw hands through fold equity and realized equity.
Knowing hand rankings is not enough. You also need to know when showdown happens, how the best five cards are built, and when kickers actually decide the winner.
Not every pretty suited hand should squeeze, and not every blocker hand should continue versus a 5-bet jam. This playbook connects linear 3-bets, squeeze EV, value 4-bets, and bluff 4-bets into one preflop system.
A starting hand is only “good” inside a seat, stack, and plan. Once you understand that, open raising becomes a much cleaner default.
Poker gets clearer when you stop guessing one exact combo and start comparing whole groups of hands that can still exist.
Treat 3-bet pots as structured range clashes, not emotional ego battles. Once you sort hands into response buckets, preflop becomes much cleaner.
Connected wet boards are not flop-only decisions. This guide shows when to slow down, when to bet bigger, and which turn cards truly unlock strong second barrels.
Strong starting hands are not just pretty cards. They are hands that avoid domination, benefit from position, and still make sense after calls or 3-bets.
Position is not a small bonus. It changes who gets information first, who controls the pot more often, and which hands become easier to play.