Gameplan approach
There are two primary approaches to learning: the Gameplan and the Trainer.
Hand Review
Select a hand, find a similar flop, and review your hand. If your strategy aligns with the PS-Strategy, great! Then, incorporate the tendencies of the pool or player, such as "low bluff frequency," and check if your action is still the best strategy. Quickly, a bluff-catching hand
(with EV(Call) - EV(Fold) = 0) can shift to EV(Fold) >> EV(Call)
Range-EV Distribution
Understand how well various runouts hit the ranges. For beginners, categorize runouts into three clusters:
Good Runout: Range-EV increased relative to the last action
Neutral Runout: Range-EV unchanged relative to the last action
Bad Runout: Range-EV decreased relative to the last action
Correctly categorizing runouts is fundamental to understanding poker and correlates with your future strategy and your opponent's choices.
Stable vs. Unstable States
Stable states have low EV differences between actions, while unstable states have high EV differences. Understand the science behind it and determine which part of the game tree to select to enter these situations. This reduces variance dramatically.
Runout-Clustering
Understand the degree of simplification and the structure of clusters. Analyze how simplification is determined by past actions, the board, and your range. Study the clusters' structure to comprehend poker principles better.
The Simplifier
Discover the relevance of specific actions for any situation and understand the game plan of certain player types. This helps to adapt more accurately.
Understanding Tree Complexity
Each action has a different complexity level, and complexity is proportional to the number and intensity of mistakes players make. Forcing your opponent to play in parts of the tree where you have an edge increases your win rate.
Range-EV for Different Flops
Understand the Range-EV for various flop structures to get an overview of the flop strategy.
Made-Hand-Distribution
Learn how the range structure correlates with actions, which is a fundamental pillar of understanding poker.