Advanced terms are grouped by the decision they affect, not alphabetical trivia.
Advanced poker reference
Advanced Poker Terminology Glossary
Fast definitions for the range, blocker, equity, leverage, SPR, and exploit terms that appear in deeper NL and PL strategy work.
Quick reference
Use the term, then name the table decision.
Advanced vocabulary is useful only when it shortens hand review. Each group below ties a definition to the decision family it most often affects: range reading, blocker selection, realization, pressure, pot geometry, or opponent adjustment.
Each card keeps the definition compact enough to use during hand review.
Definitions point directly to preflop, SPR, blocker, pot-limit, and river leverage work.
Structured study map
Jump from terminology to the exact NL or PL decision layer.
Use this map when a hand-review note names a concept but the next action is unclear. Each path links the glossary to a deeper Mix Game School lesson or simulator.
Range language
Terms for describing what each player can still hold.
Range construction
Building a set of hands for a spot by value, bluff, protection, and realization needs.
Condensed range
A range with many medium-strength hands and fewer nutted or air combinations.
Uncapped range
A range that can still contain the strongest hands after the previous action.
Capped range
A range that likely lacks top-end hands because earlier action would have raised them.
Range advantage
A distribution edge where one player holds more strong hands across the whole range.
Nut advantage
A specific edge in the strongest possible hands, even if total equity is close.
Combo count
The number of card combinations that make up a hand class inside a range.
Node
A decision point in the game tree, such as facing a turn probe after checking back flop.
Blockers and removal
Cards that change which hands remain plausible.
Blocker
A card in your hand that reduces the combinations of a hand an opponent can hold.
Unblocker
A card pattern that leaves opponents with more folding hands or more worse calls.
Removal effect
The mathematical impact of known cards on possible opponent combinations.
Nut blocker
A card that blocks the opponent's best possible hands in the current texture.
Suit blocker
A card that blocks flushes or flush draws of a specific suit.
Pair blocker
A rank in your hand that reduces set or two-pair combinations.
Reverse blocker
A card that blocks the hands you want an opponent to have when bluffing or value betting.
Key-card removal
Using one specific card to judge whether a line still credibly represents value.
Equity and realization
Terms for turning raw showdown share into actual winnings.
Equity realization
How much of a hand's raw equity it can actually convert by the river.
Fold equity
Value gained when a bet makes better or live-equity hands fold.
Denial
Betting to make hands with meaningful equity give up before they improve.
Protection bet
A bet that values winning now or charging draws, even when worse calls are limited.
Reverse implied odds
Future losses that occur when improving still leaves you second best.
Domination
A relationship where one hand shares a rank but has a weaker kicker or draw path.
Equity bucket
A class of hands with similar equity and strategic role in a spot.
Realization tax
The practical discount applied to equity when out of position or facing pressure.
Pressure and leverage
Words for bets that threaten future decisions, not just current chips.
Leverage
Pressure created by a bet because later streets can put more money at risk.
Overbet
A bet larger than the pot, usually representing polarized value and bluffs.
Geometric sizing
Sizing bets so stacks can go in smoothly across future streets.
Minimum defense frequency
The theoretical continuing frequency needed to stop a bet from auto-profiting.
Polarized range
A betting range concentrated around strong value hands and bluffs.
Merged range
A betting range with many medium-strong hands that expect calls from worse.
Barrel
A follow-up bet on a later street after betting the previous street.
Cap pressure
Using an opponent's capped range to apply larger bets on cards that favor your range.
SPR and pot geometry
Stack and pot terms that shape commitment decisions.
Stack-to-pot ratio
The effective stack divided by the current pot size.
Effective stack
The smaller stack between players who can contest the pot.
Commitment threshold
The point where folding after investing chips becomes strategically difficult.
Pot-limit geometry
How maximum pot-sized bets grow the pot in pot-limit games.
Turn setup
A flop size chosen to leave a specific turn shove, overbet, or river stack.
Shove threshold
The stack depth where an all-in bet becomes a natural size.
Stack depth band
A practical grouping such as 30bb, 75bb, 100bb, or 200bb that changes ranges.
Pot control
Choosing checks or small sizes to avoid creating a stack-off pot with medium strength.
Exploit and study terms
Language for diagnosing opponents and reviewing hands.
Population read
A tendency observed across many similar opponents rather than one player.
Node lock
Changing an assumed strategy in solver work to study an opponent's specific mistake.
Exploit
An intentional adjustment that targets a repeated opponent error.
Frequency mistake
Betting, calling, raising, or folding too often in a specific spot.
Showdown bias
Overweighting hands that reached showdown while ignoring folds and unshown ranges.
Line check
Reviewing whether each action tells a consistent value or bluff story.
Sensitivity review
Testing which cards, sizes, or assumptions change the decision.
Heuristic
A simple rule of thumb used to make better real-time decisions under pressure.
Resource signals
Glossary metrics and reader notes show frequent reference use.
The page is designed as a working reference: short sections, sticky jump targets, related lessons, and concise cards make it easy to keep open while studying advanced hands.
Frequently revisited during advanced lessons
Internal learning paths can point readers back to exact term families instead of forcing them through a broad foundation glossary.
Built for hand-review lookup speed
Six compact groups cover the terms most likely to interrupt review: range shape, removal, realization, pressure, stack geometry, and exploits.
The blocker and MDF cards made the turn-river leverage lesson easier to parse because I could stop guessing what each term meant.
Advanced curriculum reader
I used this while reviewing 3-bet pots. The SPR and range terms gave me cleaner notes than just writing 'felt awkward.'
Hand review participant