Archives 2021

GTO play on A-A-7 (free multiway solve)

Here’s a look at how GTO (Game Theory Optimal) approaches this scenario on a board of A-A-7 rainbow. It was solved with our private multiway solver by our GTO coaches and we are happy to share this free solve with you. It was created for the students of the study group and if you like to learn a more GTO based playing style for 6+, you may check out our GTO Multi-way Solves Videos

So let’s jump right into the action. We are looking at a 5 way spot, 50Antes UTG vs MP vs BTN (CO & HJ folded pre).

First thing, we can notice is that UTG on this board bets quite a bit (65.5%) and the reason for that is because here UTG actually has a range advantage.

We can see that UTG has more pure Ax hands in its range as MP already starts to jam most of them preflop.

Second thing is that solver wants to use solely 33% sizing and the reason for that is, because UTG’s range hits so well on this board that it basically can go range betting almost whole range (Solver is not because then bluff frequency will be too high and MP’s response for that will be to start x/raising tons of hands but in real-games we can range-bet 80%+ of our range, in particular, with 2 backdoor hands where we can barrel a lot on turns until people figure it out and adjust.

In real games people won’t be defending enough, in particular, hands like KQ, KJo, KTo and maybe even not pocket pairs like 66, 88, 99. For what it’s worth we definitely should call against this sizing all pocket pairs even against biggest nits who we know always has Ax there because of pure pot odds.

It’s true that in real-games people might not be jamming preflop as wide also, so argument could be made that MP will still have tons of Ax hands in its range but then in-game we can check MP’s VPIP frequencies and chances are that MP is overlimping as well, hands like Q9, K9, J9, J8s, Q8s etc. Also, even against more Ax saturated range 33% bet from UTG is very profitable bet and doesn’t need to go through so often to make it a profitable play.

This is BTN’s calling range and I think it’s very close to what people would call in real games – Ax, pocket pairs and flushdraws.

If we take a look at MP’s and BTN’s raising ranges then for both they are very similar – always 77 and then for MP its 98ss, 97ss and for BTN A7 and then Solver adds some bluff-raises with blockers for balance.

In real-games I don’t think we have to balance this as people wont be able to make a note of this and if we hold 77 and there are bets in front of us, there is no way that people will fold Ax here after we raise.

To make it more interesting – both players (MP & BTN) calls UTG’s flop bet and we go to turn. There is a pattern on two different turn classes: on high card turns without spade (A, Q, K,) UTG continues barreling on turn because it has nut advantage on these high card turns and also very likely that UTG’s AQ and AJ are still good.

Whereas on low card or/and spade turns UTG now checks its range because it was betting flop pretty wide and once called by 2 players it wants to slow down as on turn it has wider range versus 2 narrower calling ranges where it doesn’t have nut advantage.

now versus bets UTG just pretty much calls some flushdraws (mostly combo draws) and Ax hands.

On high card turn its a bit more interesting though, this is what UTG continues barreling with, important note with bluffs like QTo, JQo, JTo is that we want to do this without a spade so there is a bigger chance that villain has a flushdraw instead of Ax hands.

This is UTG’s jamming range on river.

On river UTG bluff catches with weaker Ax, in particular, with ones not holding a spade and jams for value better Ax hands such as AJ and AQ. Bluffs mostly with 66 as it unblocks MP’s folding range as MP doesn’t have any FDs missed having a 6 in them (K6s, Q6s etc folds preflop).

Exploitatively I like going really small on the river with bluffs (like 12Ante) just to fold out missed flush draws but of course its not solver approved play, because if we do not merge our sizings we open ourselves up for being exploited.

Interesting and cool thing about UTG’s range advantage is that if UTG decides to check OTF and MP bets then UTG goes for raise 41.2%

Then if it gets called by MP it proceeds with very similar strategy and pattern as we discussed previously – barrels more on high, non-spade turn cards and checks a lot on spade and/or low turn cards.

Happy if you made it this far! 🙂 This was, as mentioned, a free multiway solve (either text + images or in form of a video) from the GTO study group and if you like to learn more, feel free join our Discord channel if you have a question regarding GTO or anything  6+ related.

Thanks for tuning in and good luck on the tables. 🍀

Beginners Video Bundle

We have created this bundle to help you get started with the most important topics to begin with as a beginner for a very fair price. 

In total you will get around 11½ hours of strategy content, split into 5 different topics: (for a more detailed description of each part, please click on the links below)

  1. Preflop: Road to 6+ Winning Player (total around 2hours) $39
    1. Part 1: Limping (30-40min)
    2. Part 2: Open raising/ Isolating (30-40min)
    3. Part 3: Facing a raise / 3-betting (30-40min)
  2. Postflop: Road to 6+ Winning Player Course (total around 2½ hours) $59
  3. NL100 Session Review on GGPoker (3 Part Series – total of 3.5 hours) $29
  4. Playing ISO Pots (1 hour video) $19
  5. Playing Out of Position (1 hour video) $19

Total Price of all videos: $165

All videos will be available for streaming after purchase.

With Bundle Discount: $99. Save $65!

Beginners Video Bundle

If you wish to pay with another payment method, please get in touch with us via email at: contact@sixplusholdem.com. We also accept Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter, GGPoker P2P or Crypto.

For any questions regarding these videos or interest in a deeper understanding in preflop and postflop play, feel free to join our discord study group @Shortdeck Bootcamp

Playing Out of Position

In this video Coach Karlis explains the most important aspects when playing out of position in 6+, which is very different compared to NLHE with many other factors that we need to consider. We will break it down in ISO and Single Raised Pots, including many hand examples so you will feel much more confident in playing OOP and maximize your winrate, because these scenarios happen very often and it’s crucial that you know how to approach these spots.

This video is primarily focused on analysis of post flop play. If you are a beginner you will get the most out of this video if you already have some understanding of preflop raising and isolating ranges.

Topics covered in this video:

  • When to raise preflop (w/ hand examples)
  • Playing raised flops postflop (w/ hand examples and equity calculation)
  • Preflop ISO calling ranges
  • Postflop play in ISO pots (w/ hand examples and equity calculation)

The video is 1h long and you will be able to stream it in our library under  ➜ my videos after purchase

ISO & Raised Pots OOP

If you wish to pay with another payment method, please get in touch with us via email at: contact@sixplusholdem.com. We also accept Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter, GGPoker P2P or Crypto.

For any questions regarding this video or interest in a deeper understanding in preflop and postflop play, feel free to join our discord study group @Shortdeck Bootcamp

Playing ISO Pots

In this video our Coach Karlis breaks down the key fundamentals on playing ISO pots, both in and out of position. It’s 1 hour long and features different topics that are important, when we decide to isolate limpers and more importantly how we approach the situations on different flops and runouts.

Knowing how and when to ISO is one of the most important aspects in the game of 6+, so improving on this is mandatory if you want to get a good winrate.

We have picked plenty of hand examples including equity calculations to make it easier for you to understand how we should approach different scenarios with different hands. This video will be helpful for beginners but also experienced players alike, as we dig a little deeper into the spots.

Topics covered in this video:

  • When to isolate non-allin?
  • Hand selection for NONai ISO’s
  • Hitting the flop as the preflop aggressor (with hand examples)
  • Missing the flop as the aggressor (with hand examples)
  • Range example with calculations in Oranges
  • Going through the thought process OTF in ISO pots
  • Difference between playing regulars vs recreational players
  • Equity calculations on different board textures

Unlock this video in our library for a price of $19. After purchase, you can stream the video in your library under ➜ my videos.

Playing ISO Pots

If you wish to pay with another payment method, please get in touch with us via email at: contact@sixplusholdem.com. We also accept Skrill, Neteller, MuchBetter, GGPoker P2P or Crypto.

For any questions regarding this video or interest in a deeper understanding in preflop and postflop play, feel free to join our discord study group @Shortdeck Bootcamp

Note taking when playing without a HUD

One of the best sites to play 6+ / Short Deck is GG poker. There is plenty of action and rakeback is good, compared to the nearly zero percent PokerStars offers you. The one disadvantage is that you can’t use a HUD when playing, so you are missing a lot of information, especially if you are playing 3+ tables. So note taking and using player tags is extremely important if you want to have a great win-rate.

A lot of regs just tag someone a fish because they made a non-GTO play, which is dangerous, because there are many categories of recreational players, and tagging someone a ‘’fish’’ will not tell you how to take advantage of his lack of 6+ knowledge. Note taking is a skill in itself, so I will show you how to make good notes and how to classify players.

If I had to choose the most important thing taking notes about, it would be preflop raising: from which positions do people raise preflop and what sizing do they choose.

Example:

5-handed, everyone has 100A. UTG folds and UTG+1 makes it 8x preflop. It goes to showdown and he flips over KK.

In this situation I would make a note which would look like this:

‘’utg1 8x KK 100a 5h’’

That means raised under the gun 8x with KK 5handed while 100a deep.

It just allows us to read the note quicker, while we have to make decisions on other tables.

Why is this so important?

Just this one hand tells us that:

1) This player is probably unbalanced when it comes to his preflop range. He is probably raising good hands and limping bad hands, which means he is probably not a regular.

2) Since he is raising big with good hands, his limps are much weaker so we can attack them.

3) We can easily put him on a range when he raises and play hands that can crack QQ+ (98s, T9s etc), while folding hands preflop that do badly against a strong preflop range (QJo, KQo, AJo etc)

Let say one orbit later the same player is on UTG+1 again and now opens 3x from UTG+1 again with you on the BTN. Everyone calls his preflop raise. What would you do in this situation with ATs? AJo? KQs A9s? Fold since he is raising again?

The answer is no. You can go allin with all of these hands. Because we know that his standard opening sizing was 8x with KK, 3x is almost always going to be a weaker hand and since everyone else just called, there is about 20 antes of dead money in the middle. The 3x raiser will almost always fold and so will everyone behind them. The chance that CO called that 3x raise with a strong hand like AK is pretty much 0%, so we can pick up 20 antes for free.

Of course, we are generalizing. It’s possible he just opens random sizings and might raise 8x with KK in one hand and 3x on the next one. It’s still a profitable play, since we will be right most of the time, and in case we were wrong and he flips over KK, our A9s still has 44%. That’s the good thing about being agressive in 6+, you always have a decent equity if you get caught preflop.

All of this was possible, because we paid attention and made a note about a player’s sizings.

The second most importand thing to figure out is a recreational player’s VPIP. It’s very easy to play against someone who has a 75% vpip, you just have to notice when someone plays too many hands.

Say you are in the hand. Villain limps UTG. Three other players limp also. Nothing happens till the river, everyone shows their hand and that’s the end of this small pot, but you notice that villain limped J7o from UTG. This is very far from a normal UTG limping range, so I will make a note

‘’L utg 100a J7o 5h’’

That means ‘’Limped J7 offsuit under the gun five handed 100 antes deep’’.

Okay, so he limps a little too loose, how can we take advantage of that?

Example:

Villain limps UTG. Everyone folds. Regular on the CO limps as well and we are on the BTN with QJo. Normally this would be an easy check, since we want to play this hand in position and we don’t want anyone to limp / shove, especially since we are playing against an UTG range, which is the tightest. But because we know UTG limps too wide, we can ISO-raise very wide in this spot. We are not risking getting limp / shoved from UTG and from CO (since regs don’t trap on CO). QJo becomes a great ISO-raise hand in this case. Either we get two folds and we pick up 7 antes for free,, or someone calls our ISO-raise and we are in position with a very playable hand and range advantage.

These are two examples where we can win pots just by paying attention, finding a weakness and taking advantage of that. In both examples, this aggression will work because other regulars will overfold when you are showing strength by reraising allin and in the other example, attacking an UTG limp, since you are showing aggression against a strong range, people will think you are strong too. The truth is you just paid more attention and saw that villain was weak due to note taking.

Article by „coixdog“. If u want more tips on note taking or other topics, you can book coaching lessons  with our coach coixdog on Discord or contact us at contact@sixplusholdem.com

GGPoker Short Deck Series 2021

GGPoker has in recent times had success hosting big tournament series like the Online WSOP or Omaholics Series. They even have a weekly series called MILLION$ with five million dollars in total guaranteed price pool. Now the time has finally come for a 6+ / Short Deck series, which will feature a total guaranteed price pool of one million dollars. It’s not large compared to many other series, but at least they finally host one.

The Short Deck series will run eight days from Saturday 4th of July to Saturday 11th of July. For any experienced player there should be a lot of value in this series, and to help people plan their schedule we will present an overview of the series and it’s structure here with focus on the Main and Mini Main event. You can find a complete overview of the tournament series at the bottom of this article.

Main and Mini Main Event

$525 Unlimited Re-entry Bounty Main Event $100k GTD

$52.50 Unlimited Re-entry Bounty Mini Main $50k GTD

These will be played with a Stage 1 and a Final Stage, where the final will be played on July 11 at 21:30 CET. Each day will have two Stage 1 tournaments starting at 15:30 CET for the early heat and 21:30 for the late heat.

Play in Stage 1 ends at level 14 (total playing time of close to 4 hours) and it’s important to note that if you qualify in multiple Stage 1 tournaments your bounties and stacks will be combined for the Final Stage. You could potentially play all 15 Stage 1 tournaments and acquire a massive stack and bounty.

Since these are all bounty tournaments it’s not recommended to register late if you can avoid it. It’s important to give yourself the best chance at acquiring a large stack in bounty tournaments.

Side Events and Multiple Stacks

Each day will offer smaller Short Deck tournaments, where most have 2- or 3 Stack formats, which might be unfamiliar to many. If a tournament is a 3-Stack format it means that you would have 3x 10.000 chips at your disposal. It’s up to you if you want to take 10.000, 20.000 or 30.000 to the table, which can be done any time until registration ends. Of course you can take 10.000 at a time and you’ll have two more chances if you bust. Our recommendation would be to always try to cover weaker players at your table. It’s also unlimited re-entry, so if you plan to re-entry always try to cover weaker players.

Most side-events will offer Early Bird Bubble Protection, so if you register before the tournament starts you’ll have the added benefit of bubble protection.

Final Day: 11th of July

Featuring $10,300 Super High Roller $200k GTD

Mark this day in your calendar, if you are a fan of the big buy-in Tournaments. On July 11th, not only the two mains (mini and main) will take place, but also a $10,300 Super High Roller with a guaranteed prize pool of $200K USD will run at 09:10 PM CET. Check in a day or two early to possibly find some satellites for it, but as of now, there are none available.

We wish all participants the best of luck and hope you will have plenty of deep runs. 🍀

New to GG Poker?

GGPOKER SIGN-UP OFFER FOR NEW PLAYERS

If you sign-up on GG, using our bonus code (contact us for the code), you will get 10% from your total net rake back, in form of store credits. This means you can use those to purchase anything we offer on our homepage (HUD sub, Charts, Courses, etc.).

Example: You rake a total of $800 in March, you can choose any product from our homepage for $80 or less, and use the remaining for other items. Alternatively, it could also be deducted from an item that costs more, so you would have a $80 discount on it.

In addition to this, you will also get exclusive MTT tickets from invitational events and similar, which are only valid if you used our bonus code in the sign-up form.

 

Full Tournament Schedule

Terms & Conditions

  • Players must be aged 18 and above to participate in this series.
  • Please note that tournament prize pool guarantees are subject to change and some amounts listed on this website may not be current; please check the guarantee amounts listed in the tournament lobby of the GGPoker app for up-to-date prize pool information.
  • The promotion terms and conditions are subject to the site terms and conditions, which can be found here.
  • GGPoker standard rules apply.

MuchBetter Wallet Review

MuchBetter has since it’s launch in 2017 quickly emerged as a valid alternative to other payment processors and wallets like Skrill and Neteller. The company is based in the UK and regulated by the FCA (Financial Conduct Authority), also based in the UK.

The main benefits of MuchBetter are their low fees and the ease of use. They are supported by many online gambling and poker sites, including major poker sites like PokerStars, PartyPoker and GGPoker.

The only major country not supported by MuchBetter is the United States.

How to Register on MuchBetter

It only takes minutes to register. All you need to do is open our sign-up link here, and then enter your personal details. As the final steps you will need to install the MuchBetter app on your phone. The app is your main interface for everything you use MuchBetter for. E.g. if you wanted to deposit to a poker site you would simply put in your phone number registered with MuchBetter into the poker sites cashier and then you can confirm the deposit in the app.

Deposits and Withdrawals

The options for funding your account depends on which country you reside in and there are too many to present them all here. A normal bank or SEPA transfer has no fees, whereas VISA or Mastercard can have 0 to 5% fee, depending on your region. You can also deposit with Bitcoin at only a 2% fee.

For withdrawals popular methods like SEPA bank transfer there is a 2% fee, but they also provide withdrawals via Bitcoin at 2%. Regular bank transfers will however cost 0 – 5% depending on which country you reside in.

If you are interested in a complete overview on methods and fees please click here.

Using your MuchBetter Account

The really amazing benefit for using MuchBetter is that, once you have funded your account, it’s free if you want to transfer or receive money from a friend or deposit / withdraw money to a poker site. If you have ever sent money to a friend using other payment processors you likely would have been disappointed with how costly this can be in fees. With MuchBetter you won’t have to worry about such things. The only fee there is would be converting currency, which comes at 0.99%.

Moneymaker Poker Promotion

During last September MuchBetter offered a special poker promotion with the chance to win entry to a major tournament with $10.000 buy-in or other prices like one on one training session with Chris Moneymaker. A great promotion for all Poker fans and we can expect more of such kind in the near future. Stay tuned for more.

 

 

 

MuchBetter Prepaid Debit Mastercard ® and Fob

If you reside in an EEA country you can order a free MuchBetter Debit MasterCard to spend your funds. They also offer a special key-chain fob for contactless payments, which makes spending funds super easy in stores and shops.

Using your card or fob costs absolutely nothing in fees, except ATM withdrawals which cost 0.99%.

Conclusion

With some of the lowest fees on the market and ease of use, plus wide range of deposit and withdrawal methods, MuchBetter beats a lot of the competition. If you wish to give MuchBetter a try please sign up using this link.