


In this hand, since there will only be one paid seat, we will have to play much more aggressively than if there were 2 or 3 paid seats To return to our starting hand (AQo), the hand is strong enough to call for recovery since our equity will be far greater than OC equity in the long run. On our side, we can call with a range of 78.6% which is detailed as follows: This means that it can grow all in profitably with its entire range In this situation, CO will have a range of 100%. This is the optimal push range of the cutoff:

Once this is done, you will have your analysis appear The question is, with which range we can call profitablyĪfter entering the hand information, press "Next" to find out the call range The button and the small armour lie down. In the CO position it pushes all in (again). In the hand in question, the CO (Cutoff) is a very aggressive player who takes advantage of the bubble (he opens all his hands in position). However, only one spot will be paid for $100 so there will be no merit in trying to finish the tournament in second or third place In this hand there are only 4 players left. This is a theoretical result to help us understand the value of a hand or a rangeĬarefully analyse the details of the hand above Fairness is only valid if all hands go to the slaughter every time. Fairness tells us the percentage of time all three hands will win the prize pool at the river. Note here that "Player 2" will win the hand 42.2% of the time with his hand (AQo). In purple you have examples of the hand(s) included in the rangeįinally, the black rectangle shows us the fairness of each row in relation to the other two. It has 29.4% of the strongest possible preflop hands For example, "Player 1" has 29.4% of all possible Hold'em hands in his range. The red rectangle indicates the extent of the range of villains. The green rectangle indicates the players involved in the hand (Player 0, Player 1 and Player 2) Let's see here the fairness of 3 players according to their rank:Ībove, we made a simulation of equity between three players. Of course, HRC can do much more (buying HRC simply for its standard equity calculation function would be like buying a computer just for the calculator), but can still be very useful First, you can use it as a standard equity calculator. Some practical features of Hold'em Resources Calculator
