95 Posts
Member since 07-01-2010
More posts by 18orbetter
Hey Rob,
Sorry if I sounded harsh on my last post, I honestly didn't mean to, probably the language barrier and my general passion got me.![]()
Good work, but you have to include your fold equity too. If I'm breaking even against his call/3bet range and he has to fold a bunch of 2-5 outers, it may still be a good raise.
Hey,
so you basically say (after my balance calculation, see the results there), that a) he's going to call down close to all of his hands, b) will not bluff the absolute bottom of his rang...
Yep, that's the way - and you can 1-click export to Equilab, and do the range on range calc there, but it's rarely used in NL IMO.
Yeah, you are right. Folding percentage should be lower than .33. I am not entirely sure, but 20% seems too low, though, because I always have to have a bit better equity OOP. But ye...
@bella: how is (.33,.33,.33) a balanced flop strategy vs a cbet? Villain gets 4:1 on a cbet, meaning you should fold around 20%, so he would be indifferent to bluffing. If you fold 1/3, you're w...
Combonator FTW. It basically is Equilab and Flopzilla combined, except it cannot do range on range analysis, but you can do it using 2 Combonators and Equilab/Stove. I actually cannot name a fea...
Ok, let's approach it this way: if you raise A9 or better on the turn, and you want to get a balanced range, you'll raise somewhere close to the 45% mark. Given that Villain definitely has the s...
@Psycho: yep, I forgot your personal game can change equities.
@eskiboy: in this spot I don't have a raising range at all on the flop, given it's a 3bet pot I'm forced to peel wide, s...
@raising the turn: against my fairly laggy (14%) 3betting range A9 has 56% equity - adding that the opponent might check the turn occasionally, but won't call down with his entire range for sure...