Poker learning resources

Find the right mixed-game tool without hunting the whole library.

Start with game selection, then move into a learning path, a rotation session, or a review tool. The launcher below keeps beginners, returning players, and tool-first users on one track.

Intent launcher

Start with the study job, not the feature list.

Choose the lane that matches the work in front of you. Each card groups the tools that belong together so you do not have to sift through duplicate choices.

Practice

Use one practice hub instead of duplicate reps.

Use this lane when the concept is known and you want more decision volume. The main trainer stays first; the mode links are for tighter drill formats.

AI coach

Use guided feedback when you want the next correction.

Use this lane when you want feedback on reasoning, not just the result. It is strongest after a hand, drill, or short study block.

Quick access

Choose by intent, then filter by tool.

Beginners should start with game selection and the learning path. Leak reviews should move through hand history analysis, the evaluator, and strategy comparison. Rotation sessions should use the rotation simulator, switch reset, and practice trainer together.

Beginner

Need the right starting point?

Use the game selector first, then use the learning path to decide what to study next.

Open game selection

Leak review

Need to diagnose a hand or line?

Use hand history analysis for the full write-up, then compare the hand evaluator, strategy comparison, and AI coach.

Review a hand

Rotation session

Need a mixed-game warm-up or switch reset?

Use the rotation simulator to plan reps, then use the switch reset and Practice Trainer to rehearse the session.

Plan rotation
Filter by study need

Showing all 20 poker learning tools.

Game fit

Game selection guide

Answer skill, study, pace, and preference questions to find the poker variant that fits your current level.

Choose a game

Study path

Personalized learning path

Turn game type, experience, weekly study time, and your current leak into a tailored multi-week poker study plan.

Build path

Rotation builder

Rotation Session Builder

Build a mixed-game practice session with timed game switches, reset prompts, and feedback notes.

Build session

Switch reset

Game Switch Reset

Visualize the strategy reset between games with a score, checklist, carryover risks, and next-orbit plan.

Plan reset

Hand review

Hand History Analysis

Paste a played hand, tag the game, street, pot pressure, and reasoning, then receive structured strategic feedback.

Analyze a hand

Hand reading

Hand evaluator

Enter private cards and board cards to check made-hand texture, improvement paths, and a practical strategy cue.

Open evaluator

Line selection

Strategy comparison

Compare aggressive, balanced, and defensive lines with pot price, equity, position, and pressure-point inputs.

Compare lines

Bet geometry

Post-Flop Bet Geometry

Simulate SPR, range pressure, board texture, and custom bet sizes before choosing a post-flop betting plan.

Simulate sizing

Range builder

Range Construction Simulator

Build NL Hold'em ranges against tight, loose, aggressive, or passive opponent strategies before choosing value, call, bluff, and fold buckets.

Construct range

Pot-limit geometry

Pot Limit Bet Geometry

Visualize legal pot-limit max bets, custom pressure, likely callers, and next-street SPR before choosing a sizing branch.

Visualize PL sizing

Pot-limit odds

Pot-Limit Odds Simulator

Compare call price, estimated equity, implied odds, fold equity, and legal pot-limit pressure before choosing a branch.

Simulate PL odds

Practice trainer

Practice Trainer

Use one practice hub with drill, quiz, card-filter, and XP modes instead of choosing between duplicate scenario tools.

Start trainer

Strategy library

Strategy Library

Filter practical mixed-game scenarios by skill level, game family, and decision category, then log feedback gaps.

Browse scenarios

Community review

Community Hand Review

Submit hands in one public workflow, compare votes and lessons, and turn useful feedback into study notes.

Submit a hand

AI coach

AI Feedback Coach

Turn a hand decision, confidence level, and written reasoning into tailored feedback and a focused study loop.

Get feedback

Leak plan

Personal strategy development

Score recurring weak spots, confidence, review habits, and study time to build an adaptive poker training regimen.

Build regimen

Drill mode

Drill mode

Use adaptive rapid practice by game, difficulty, and leak to build quicker decisions.

Open drill mode

Card filter

Card-filter mode

Run exact pocket, board, texture, focus, and difficulty reps when you need targeted practice.

Filter hands

Quiz mode

Quiz mode

Use answer-based scenario checks with instant feedback when you want a faster understanding check.

Start quiz

XP mode

XP mode

Track scores, badges, streaks, and levels when you want repetition pressure to keep you honest.

Open XP mode

Study loop

Use the right lane for the next session.

The hub works best when each visit has one job. Keep the sequence short: choose, study, practice, review, and then ask for feedback if the spot still feels unclear.

01 Beginner

Start with game selection, then map the next week.

Pick the right variant first if you are new or returning after time away. The path tool turns that choice into a short study plan.

Start with game selection
02 Leak review

Open the hand review tools before you add more volume.

Use hand history analysis, the evaluator, strategy comparison, and the AI coach when a line, sizing branch, or reasoning step feels off.

Review a hand
03 Rotation session

Plan the next mixed-game block and reset between games.

Use the rotation simulator and switch reset when the session needs timed changes, clearer transitions, or a cleaner warm-up.

Build a rotation

Tool 01

Poker game selection guide.

Use this first when you are deciding whether limit hold'em, Omaha hi-lo, stud, razz, or a draw game is the right next study target.

Poker game selection guide

Poker game selection tool for choosing the best variant.

Use this poker game selection tool to find the best poker variant for my skill level by answering a few study and play-style questions, then get a ranked game recommendation with a short learning path.

Ready to recommend a poker variant.

Current comfort zone

Recommendation

Start with Limit Hold'em.

Best fit88Match score
Learning curveLowRamp difficulty
Next skillPricePrimary focus
Study loadLightWeekly demand
Best match Limit Hold'em 88/100 fit

Most aligned with your current skill, study time, and risk preference.

Runner-up Omaha Hi-Lo 74/100 fit

Good backup when availability or study goals make the top pick harder to use.

Decision gap 14 points Clear preference

The top game wins by enough that it should be your next focused session.

Best starting game: Limit Hold'em

Limit hold'em is the cleanest entry point because it teaches fixed-limit price-taking, position, and value without adding split-pot or live-card complexity.

Skill readiness Gentle ramp

The recommendation keeps the first session focused on rules and price decisions.

Format preference Direct match

The recommended game lines up with your preferred format.

Selection confidence Clear recommendation

The top score is far enough ahead to make this a useful first test.

Why it fits

  • Matches a beginner profile with a low learning curve.
  • Uses fixed-limit decisions to make pot odds easier to practice.

Watch out

Do not rush into split-pot or draw games until price-taking feels automatic.

First session

Play one short session focused only on starting hands, position, and break-even calls.

Skill fit Beginner ready

Start with a low-ramp game that reinforces basic decisions before adding extra formats.

Study goal Foundation path

The recommendation supports clean rules, pot-price practice, and repeatable review notes.

Risk fit Low variance

Use lower-pressure fixed-limit decisions while the first poker variant becomes familiar.

First week One narrow focus

Play one short session, review one leak category, then compare the runner-up only if the fit feels off.

Your profile

You want simple rules, a fast pace, and a light weekly study load.

Pivot option

If the recommended game is hard to find, use Omaha Hi-Lo as the next closest fit.

Avoid for now

Skip 2-7 Triple Draw until range and discard decisions feel more comfortable.

Tie-breaker

If two games are close, choose the one you can play twice this week.

Next question

After one session, ask whether the hard decisions came from rules, math, memory, or availability.

Table fit Easy to schedule

Limit Hold'em fits common home and online practice setups, so you can play soon instead of waiting for a niche lineup.

Format match Structured limit betting

Your format preference supports this recommendation because the betting structure keeps review notes focused.

Weekly plan 1 focused session

Play one short session before changing games.

Time budget 45 minutes

Keep enough time for notes after the session.

Track this Price mistakes

Log the decision that most often changes the result.

Move on when Checklist stable

Advance after the main mistake repeats less often.

Three-step study path
  1. Step 01

    Review fixed-limit betting rounds and starting hand discipline.

  2. Step 02

    Practice pot odds before adding thin value or bluff raises.

  3. Step 03

    Move into Omaha hi-lo once price-taking feels automatic.

Dynamic guide

Start with the recommended variant, then use the runner-up only when table availability or study time changes.

Choice feedback

Mark whether this game feels usable so the tool can surface a better pivot when needed.

No choice feedback yet.

What to do next

  • Play short limit hold'em drills until break-even equity is automatic.
  • Use the hand evaluator before reviewing split-pot games.

More tools

AI guidance

This recommender is a study aid, not bankroll advice. Recheck local rules, table availability, and stakes before using the recommendation in real games.

Tool 02

Poker hand evaluator.

Use this first when the hand texture is unclear or when you want a quick example before reviewing a lesson.

Poker hand evaluator

Poker hand evaluator for instant rank and strategy feedback.

This poker hand evaluator lets you enter hole cards and board cards, then instantly review hand rank, playable cards, draw texture, strategy advice, and AI mistake coaching.

Ready to evaluate the current poker hand.

Enter exactly two hole cards and no board, a flop, turn, or river.

Hands evaluate as you type, with a rank summary, strategy advice, situation read, leak check, and next practice rep.

Quick examples

Flop a royal draw and compare made-hand strength against clean heart and straight outs.

Example 1 of 7 loaded.

Instant feedback

Examples

Scenario practice for the evaluator result

Use these hands after checking the instant feedback. Each example turns the hand rank into a decision process: what is made now, which cards really improve, and what mistake the line should avoid.

Hold'em: nut draw, no made hand yet

  • Ah
  • Kh
  • Qh
  • Jh
  • 2c

The evaluator shows ace high, but the context is much stronger than the rank label.

  • Name the made hand first so you do not pretend the draw is already complete.
  • Separate clean heart outs from paired-board or dominated straight concerns.
  • Use position and fold equity before choosing a raise instead of an automatic call.

Omaha Hi-Lo: chasing half can be expensive

  • As
  • 2s
  • Kd
  • Qd
  • 3c
  • 4h
  • 9s

The low draw is promising, but the decision is not only whether a low arrives.

  • Check whether your high side has backup before building a big pot.
  • Watch for counterfeit risk if another ace, two, three, or four appears.
  • Prefer lines that can scoop or charge worse low draws, not just split.

Stud: two pair needs visible-card context

  • Ac
  • Ad
  • 7h
  • 7s
  • Kh
  • Qd
  • 2c

The rank is strong, but exposed cards decide whether it is value, control, or a bluff catcher.

  • Compare your two pair against paired doors and live overcard improvement.
  • Discount outs that are already visible or folded in remembered boards.
  • Let seventh-street action decide whether thin value still gets called by worse.

AI mistake coach coverage

The evaluator prioritizes feedback against common player errors, then adjusts the coaching by game type, selected focus, street, made-hand strength, draw quality, split-pot pressure, dead-card information, and discard conflicts.

High priority Overvaluing made hands

One pair, thin two pair, and rough pat hands can look stronger than they are when the board or draw count changes.

The evaluator flags value, control, and bluff-catching cues after the rank is calculated.

Watch closely Counting dirty outs

Players often count every improving card even when some outs complete better opponent hands or only win half.

The AI feedback separates clean draw equity from counterfeit, quartering, and reverse-implied-odds risk.

Review Forgetting game rules

Omaha two-from-hand, Stud exposed cards, Razz pairs, 2-7 penalties, and Badugi conflicts change the right read.

Switch variants to get game-specific reminders before applying the advice.

User satisfaction ratings

Rate the coaching to track whether the mistake coverage is helping.

Dynamic guide

Start with the hand rank, then compare the advice against board texture, split-pot pressure, dead cards, and draw quality before choosing a value, control, or fold plan.

More tools

AI guidance

This evaluator is a study aid, not a real-money recommendation. The AI mistake coach highlights common player errors such as overvaluing one pair, counting dirty outs, chasing only half, ignoring exposed cards, and keeping conflicted draw-game hands. Recheck opponent ranges, position, betting limits, and visible-card information before applying the advice in a live game.

Tool 03

Personalized poker learning path.

Use this when your study plan needs to change by game type, weekly time, confidence, and current leak.

Personalized poker learning path

Build a tailored study plan by game type and current leak.

Choose the game, goal, experience level, and weekly study time. The tool turns those inputs into a practical learning path with checkpoints and game-specific feedback.

Ready to build a learning path.

Tailored path

Mixed-game rotation learning path

Fit score64Path confidence
Duration4 weeksStudy block
PaceFoundationSession style
First focusSwitch checklistCheckpoint

Path summary

Build a clean rules-and-decision foundation before adding higher-pressure spots.

Add a current leak or hand-review note to make the next iteration more specific.

Tailored exercises

Practice queue

Interactive path builder

Choose the modules you will actually study

Pick modules and mark weekly commitments to make the plan usable.

Motivation feedback

Select a few modules to turn this into a study path you can complete.

Next session plan

Turn the path into the next study block

Your study block will update as the selected modules and weekly hours change.

Checkpoints

Measure the path

    Next actions

    Use this week

      Game feedback

      Adjust by variant

        Copyable AI review prompt

        Prompt ready for deeper AI or study-group review.

        Dynamic guide

        Start with the game and leak that cost the most decisions, then use the generated weekly path to review one measurable correction at a time.

        More tools

        Use the rotation simulator, strategy library, and quiz tool when the path points to a specific mixed-game skill gap.

        AI guidance

        Copy the generated review prompt into the AI feedback tool with one hand history, one assumption, and the correction you want tested.

        Tool 04

        Personal strategy development.

        Use this when your next training block should adapt to repeated weak spots, confidence, and review consistency.

        Personal strategy development

        Build a training regimen from your weakest poker spots.

        Score your current profile, choose the leaks that keep repeating, and generate a targeted practice plan with weekly reps and review prompts.

        Repeated weak spots

        Profile ready. Generate a regimen or save your current leak map.

        Adaptive training plan

        Focused leak repair plan

        Your plan will prioritize the selected weak spots and scale reps to your weekly study time.

        Tool 04

        Practice Trainer.

        Use the main drill simulator for adaptive reps, then switch modes only when you need exact card filters, quiz checks, or XP pressure.

        Drill Simulator rapid strategy reps

        Interactive Drill Practice Simulator

        Use the Drill Simulator for mixed-game poker practice with faster loading speed: pick a focused rep set, answer the live spot, then use the result panel to review the rule and queue weak spots for another pass.

        Progress tracking ready. Choose a scenario and answer to save your first rep.

        Choose a drill path

        Start with the guided planner, or tune the filters directly for a narrow practice set.

        How each rapid set works

        1. Pick the path. Use the planner for a guided ladder or choose a game, practice need, complexity, and set length manually.
        2. Answer the spot. Choose one line from the live prompt. The correct option is highlighted after every answer.
        3. Review the outcome. The feedback panel explains the rule, updates your tier or review queue, and summarizes the set when the last spot is complete.
        Scenario planner Adaptive mixed-game reps

        Adaptive ladder across the mixed-game library. Apply the plan to load a focused real-time set.

        Active set Mixed rotation: adaptive ladder

        Choose a skill level and game type, then apply the plan for a matching real-time scenario set.

        Game
        Mixed rotation
        Need
        All decisions
        Level
        Adaptive
        Pack
        Complexity ladder
        Scenario library Quick starter set first, full library on demand

        The first drill loads from the compact starter set, then the extra scenarios fill in during idle time; larger filters still load the full library only when needed.

        Complexity level Adaptive: Easy
        Easy record: 0/0 (0%)

        Answer a few spots and the simulator will move you through the ladder.

        Adaptive difficulty metrics

        The ladder is collecting performance data before changing complexity.

        Recent accuracy 0%
        Tier score 0
        Feedback routes 0
        Review queue 0
        Progress tracker 0 completed reps
        No saved review spots.
        Score 0/0
        Streak 0
        Accuracy 0%
        Set 0/10
        Mixed rotation All decisions Easy

        Preparing first spot

        Loading the fastest available practice prompt.

        Mixed-game table Waiting for the deal
        Villain Opponent
        Hidden range
        Board / exposed cards
        Street Decision
        Action is on you
        Hero Your hand
        Choose the best line
        Cards and board
        Street or draw
        Pot or action

        Dynamic Guide

        Start with Easy spots until the rule is automatic, move to Medium multiway and pressure decisions, then use Hard endgame reps for river discipline and final-draw accuracy.

        More Tools

        AI Guidance

        The drill simulator is a study aid for poker decision practice. Use the feedback to review rules, pot prices, exposed cards, split-pot risk, and draw quality before applying a line in a live game.

        Mixed-game rotation simulator

        Build a live rotation plan from the drill library.

        Choose a preset rotation, session length, and pressure level. The simulator turns the existing scenario data into timed game switches, reset prompts, and feedback notes.

        Feedback prompt: after the first simulation, write the game switch that felt least automatic.
        Feedback log

        No feedback logged yet.

        Tool 05

        Mixed-game strategy library.

        Filter categorized scenarios by skill level and decision type when you need a focused mixed-game study set.

        Mixed-game strategy library

        Browse practical mixed-game scenarios by family, street, and study goal.

        Use this mixed-game poker strategy tool to filter split-pot, stud, draw, flop, and rotation spots by leak type, pot profile, and the next lesson, game page, or drill that best fits the hand.

        Library ready. Choose filters to build a study set.

        Quick filters

        Library ready. Choose filters to build a study set.

        Next best study step

        Filter the library to see the most relevant follow-up lesson, game page, or drill for the current spot.

        Feedback loop

        Log what would improve this strategy library.

        Use feedback to track which categories need more examples, clearer cues, or higher-difficulty scenarios.

        No feedback logged yet.

        How to use the current study set.

        Start broad, then narrow one filter at a time. Use the next-step links to jump into the game page, curriculum, or drill that fixes the exact leak the card exposes.

        More learning tools

        Move from library examples into card-specific drills, hand evaluation, strategy comparison, and AI feedback when a scenario exposes a repeated leak.

        AI guidance

        After marking a study focus, write your intended action and reasoning in the AI strategy coach to get a correction loop for the same game family and decision category.

        Tool 06

        Poker strategy comparison.

        Use the comparison result as a study note: record the game, street, price, pressure point, and why the best line won.

        Poker strategy evaluator

        Poker strategy evaluator for comparing strategy lines.

        Use this poker strategy comparison tool to build a scenario, load a common preset, then compare aggressive, balanced, and defensive lines across equity, price, position, and pot pressure.

        Ready to compare this poker strategy scenario.

        Scenario presets

        Primary pressure point

        Practice decision

        Choose the line you would take before comparing it to the evaluator.

        Comparison result

        Balanced call has the cleanest risk profile.

        Break-even 14%
        Equity edge +20%
        Pressure Draw
        Risk Medium

        Best current line: Balanced call

        The pot price is strong enough to continue, but the spot does not need extra bets unless fold equity or scoop pressure is clearer.

        Your decision feedback: close match

        Your selected line is playable, but compare it against the top score before committing extra bets.

        Your line Balanced call
        Score gap 0 points
        Adjustment Stay price-aware

        Poker strategy quiz

        Test the concept behind this spot.

        Choose a format, answer three strategy questions, then review the AI coach feedback tied to this scenario.

        Question 1 of 3
        Score 0/3
        Focus Pot odds
        Pot odds

        When your equity is above break-even but position is poor, what is usually the first discipline?

        Answer a question to start the quiz.

        The coach will compare your quiz choices with the current evaluator scenario.

        Action plan Call, keep weaker hands in, and reassess on the next betting street.
        Biggest leak Raising every draw because the raw equity is acceptable.
        Review cue Name your clean outs and explain which future cards change the plan.

        Scenario notes

        Limit hold'em rewards correct price-taking. Aggression needs either value against worse calls or real fold equity.

        • Check whether the next card improves your range or only your hand.
        • Compare pot odds to equity before adding a raise.

        Dynamic guide

        Start with break-even equity, then compare whether position, opponent style, and pressure point make a raise, call, or fold more profitable.

        More tools

        Use the comparison result as a study note: record the game, street, pot price, and the reason the top strategy won.

        AI guidance

        This evaluator is a study aid, not a real-money recommendation. Recheck live cards, table reads, and room rules before applying any line.

        Tool 07

        AI poker strategy coach.

        Use the feedback tool after a hand or drill when you want personalized notes on the decision quality, leak risk, and next study action.

        AI poker strategy coach

        AI feedback effectiveness for your poker decision.

        Use the AI Poker Feedback Tool by entering the spot, the action you chose, and your reasoning. The coach scores the thought process, checks the details you provide, and gives a focused correction loop.

        1. 1. FramePick the game, street, action, and review depth so the coach knows the decision type.
        2. 2. EvidenceAdd hand texture, opponent action, pot price, and the learning target you want tested.
        3. 3. ReviewSubmit your reasoning, then use the output cards to keep, fix, and drill one habit.

        Ready to review a poker decision.

        Tailored scenario suggestion

        Current template fits the entered hand.

        As you add hand details, the coach recommends the best scenario template for the feedback.

        • Primary suggestion will update from your game, action, hand text, opponent notes, and learning goal.

        Frame the decision

        Required context
        Main question
        Review depth

        Add the facts the coach can test

        Better input, better feedback
        Decision context
        Hand details for better feedback

        Add concrete facts the coach can test. Example: Ah Kh on Qh 8h 3c 2s, villain bet turn after check-calling flop.

        Explain your thought process

        Guided prompt

        Price and equity

        I chose this action because the pot was offering __ to __, and I estimated my clean equity from __.

        Range and opponent

        I think villain's range is __, worse hands that continue are __, and better hands that fold are __.

        Next street plan

        On safe cards I will __, on scary cards I will __, and on blanks I will __.

        Personal trigger

        The emotion or habit that affected this line was __, and the smaller disciplined option was __.

        Before generating feedback, check for these details
        • The exact decision you made and the alternative you considered.
        • The pot price or bet size that made the spot close.
        • One opponent-range claim and one card-texture assumption.
        • Any stack-pressure, multiway, or emotional factor that changed the normal answer.

        Coach output

        Good price awareness, but the plan needs cleaner outs.

        • ScoreHow complete the decision process is.
        • KeepThe habit worth repeating.
        • FixThe assumption to correct next time.
        • DrillThe shortest practice rep to run.
        Decision score76Study quality
        ClarityStrongReasoning depth
        RiskMediumLeak pressure
        Next repPot oddsPractice focus
        Math disciplineReadyPrice and equity
        Range evidenceNeeds workOpponent logic
        Plan depthPartialNext streets
        CalibrationAlignedConfidence fit
        Scenario template

        Drawing hand price check

        Start with the break-even call price, discount dirty outs, and compare calling against the semi-bluff line.

        Common trap: counting every improving card as clean when the opponent can already dominate part of the draw.

        Primary checkBreak-even equity versus clean outs.
        Opponent filterWhich better hands continue or fold.
        Next repReplay the hand after removing one optimistic out.

        Outcome visualization

        Best caseClean outs are live.
        62%
        Base caseCurrent evidence quality.
        48%
        Leak riskUnproven assumptions punish the line.
        34%

        Better price and cleaner outs lift the base case; missing range evidence increases leak risk.

        Personalized feedback

        Calling is reasonable because the price is good, but the reasoning is incomplete until you count clean outs and explain why raising is not better.

        Personalized AI tips

        These tips adapt to your hand details, learning goal, opponent profile, and weakest decision metric.

        • Math firstWrite the break-even price, then discount dirty overcard outs before defending the call.
        • Opponent filterCompare calling with raising by naming better hands that fold and worse hands that continue.
        • Next repReplay the spot after removing one optimistic out and lowering confidence until the evidence improves.
        • Learning goalUse this hand to stop overvaluing dirty overcard outs in similar turn spots.

        Adaptive learning plan

        Generate or edit the spot to create a next-session plan from your current leak, saved review history, and beta confidence signal.

        Priority leakMath disciplineStart with break-even price and clean outs.
        Replay drillPrice ladderChange the bet size and rerun the same decision.
        Table cueAsk before actingWhat assumption must be true for this line?
        Confidence targetRate after reviewTrack before and after confidence to prove the feedback helped.

        Historical performance analysis

        Historical performance analysis starts after this first saved review.

        Saved reviews0New baseline
        Average score76/100Saved decision quality
        Current vs averageFirst baselineScore trend context
        Recurring leakNone yetWeakest metric
        Style patternBalancedRecent profile
        Consistency rangeNew rangeScore spread over saved reviews
        Next adjustmentStart reviewBased on prior decisions
        Tester confidenceNot ratedDecision confidence lift
        Confidence check Evidence matches confidence

        Your confidence is usable because the reasoning mentions price and a missing out-count.

        Range evidence One missing range claim

        Add the exact better hands you expect to fold or the worse hands you expect to continue.

        Replay plan Run the price first

        Replay the hand by changing the call cost, then remove one optimistic out and compare the score.

        Learning target Tie confidence to price and equity.

        Write the break-even point, discount dirty outs, and lower confidence when the math depends on optimistic assumptions.

        Decision audit

        Pot priceCall needs about 17% equity.
        Pressure pointMedium price, verify clean outs.
        Opponent filterBalanced range requires evidence.
        Position noteMiddle position limits information.
        Learning targetMath confidence
        Playing styleBalanced style keeps the advice evidence-first.
        Math disciplinePrice mentioned; equity needs a cleaner out count.
        Range evidenceName better folds and worse continues.
        Future planAdd safe, scary, and blank runouts.
        Calibration gapConfidence is close to the process grade.

        Missing assumptions

        • Count clean outs before defending the call.
        • Name which better hands can fold or worse hands can continue.
        Keep

        Price first

        You recognized that fixed-limit pot size can justify continuing without forcing a raise.

        Fix

        Clean outs

        Separate cards that make your hand from cards that make a second-best hand.

        Drill

        One-sentence plan

        Before acting, say what you will do on safe, scary, and blank runouts.

        Next study actions

        • Write the break-even price before defending the action.
        • Mark which outs are blocked, dirty, or only win half the pot.
        • Compare call and raise by naming who folds and who calls worse.

        Line comparison

        Calling keeps the price manageable, but raising needs a clear fold-equity or value target.

        Decision tests

        • If the price gets worse, the call needs cleaner outs or more implied value.
        • If the opponent is tighter, downgrade bluff-catching and thin value.

        Before you submit the spot

        • Include your exact hand, visible cards, and the opponent action that created the decision.
        • Say what feedback would change your next session.

        Copyable review prompt

        Prompt ready for a deeper AI or study-group review.

        Engagement signal

        Each generated review sends a lightweight analytics event when site analytics are enabled, which can be used to track adoption of the coach.

        Dynamic guide

        Start with the decision score, then compare math discipline, range evidence, plan depth, and confidence calibration before choosing the next drill.

        More tools

        AI guidance

        This coach is a study aid for hand review. Recheck pot size, action order, range assumptions, and game-specific rules before using any recommendation at the table.

        Rate this feedback

        Mark whether the response was accurate and useful so the study loop can be evaluated.

        Accuracy
        Helpfulness
        Before confidence
        After confidence
        Confidence liftNot ratedRate before and after confidence to tune future feedback.
        Tester patternNew signalNo beta confidence ratings saved yet.
        Adaptive responseStart ratingThe coach will adapt tips when confidence does not improve.
        No rating submitted yet.