Tools Articles
4 Reasons to RNG in Poker
In theory, you should only mix your actions if the expected value (EV) of those actions is the same. This is one of the first lessons we learn when we start dabbling with poker solvers. GTO strategies (Nash Equilibrium strategies) are constructed defensively to make the opponent indifferent in many, many spots. In turn, that opponent must mix across these indifferent actions to keep their opponent indifferent at connected nodes in the overall game tree.
The Ultimate Downswing & Tilt Prevention and Mitigation Guide
Everyone who says they never tilt is either lying or fooling themselves; this is what I've learned in my 20 years of experience in poker. In fact, I used to tell myself the same thing, but I learned that emotions never truly stay out of the window, and the ego doesn't always check itself at the door.
The Big Difference Between Heads-Up and Multiway Poker
Multiway poker is the most prevalent form of the game, both online and in live settings. For over a decade, solvers like PioSolver—and later GTOWizard—have helped us master heads-up and simple postflop spots. But the multiway landscape remained largely uncharted. Now, a groundbreaking step in AI poker solving is changing that. With GTOWizard’s new 3-way solver, we can finally explore the hidden dynamics that make multiway play so complex—and so fundamentally different.
5 Reasons to Routinely Study GTO as a Poker Player (at ANY Level)
Daniel Negreanu, Phil Ivey, Bryn Kenney, Charlie Carrel. Just to name a few. These are all great players; well-known, likable, highly successful. They have all, in one way or another, diminished GTO's value in the eyes of the public or in their own. Some (the guy with the open shirt) even started swearing at it!