$1/$3 - Shrug call or spew with AK-high? (2 Viewers)

AR_poker

High Hand
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*Appreciate any feedback/criticism/roasting!*

Background:
$1/$3 live at Saracen Casino in Pine Bluff, AR. $500 max buy-in. Rake is 10% with a $5 max per hand. 8-handed on a Sunday afternoon. Hero is a 28yo white guy. Chatty, talking sports and poker with a few players around me at the table, and relatively active. I try to hunt squeeze spots and am working on bluffs with my 3bet and 4bet range. I’ve been *very* active the past couple orbits, but I’ve also been getting smacked with the deck with playable pre-flop hands (lots of AK, KQs, AJs, etc.). Don’t have a lot of profits to show for it, but I’ve opened a good number of hands. Main villain in this hand is a ~50yo bald white guy. The room was running two tables, his table broke, and he came over to join our table. His wife was also playing at my table and sitting to my left. Her and I had been chatting a bunch, and when her husband came over to join us, she said something to the effect of, “I’m just here to have fun, he’s the real poker player in the family.” He’d been at the table for maybe an orbit at this point, no real hands of note. Hero bought in for $400 and is the effective stack with ~$350. Villain has probably ~$600 in front.

Pre-flop:
BTN straddle to $6
SB Folds
BB folds
UTG folds
UTG-1 (Hero) opens AcKh for $25
LJ folds
HJ (villain) calls
CO folds
BTN folds

Pre-flop thoughts:
4x open has been the table standard. Would’ve bumped up if there were any limpers ahead of me, and would’ve 3bet an open ahead of me (not a lot of 3betting happening at this table besides myself, and basically zero 3bet [or 4bet] bluffing). HJ calling range in a button straddle formation is relatively wide, and there might be some stronger hands sprinkled in here with the table’s relative aversion to 3betting. Let’s go hit a flop.

Flop:
($55 in pot after rake)

Ts 6c 4d

Hero bets $18

Villain x/r to $45

Hero?
 
why does race play any part of this scenario? Just curious how this affects anything?

You call and see the turn, or raise to $135 and put villain on the spot.
 
So a pot of $118 with a call of $27 I think gives you 4.3:1 or you need about 19% equity to call.
If V doesnt have a set you have 6 outs (3 x A and 3 x K) to improve; that's 24% equity.
You have enough equity to call but you are at a disadvantage being OOP.
Does V raise a set in this spot? I wouldnt - the board isnt very connected so I would call your raise with a set to keep you betting.
I would raise a gutshot - 78 or 89 - in V's spot.
So I would call and fold turn if I dont improve.
 
The down-bet on the flop puts you a tough decision here. Is villain (1) someone who would likely take advantage of a (perceived) weak c-bet on the flop or is he (2) "Raising to see where he is at" with his medium pocket pairs and does this (basically minraise) actually look a little weak? or (3) Is he the type to just nut peddle and always has a set or JJ+ here?

As played, I don't think I can fold this flop tbh, just getting too good a price. Probably a long term losing play but I'm going to have to call given the price we are getting. Call, reevaluate turn, and be prepared to x/fold on most turns.
 
So a pot of $118 with a call of $27 I think gives you 4.3:1 or you need about 19% equity to call.
If V doesnt have a set you have 6 outs (3 x A and 3 x K) to improve; that's 24% equity.
You have enough equity to call but you are at a disadvantage being OOP.
Does V raise a set in this spot? I wouldnt - the board isnt very connected so I would call your raise with a set to keep you betting.
I would raise a gutshot - 78 or 89 - in V's spot.
So I would call and fold turn if I dont improve.
Some good points. Villain generally "shouldn't" be raising most sets but also, Vilain shouldn't be showing up with 78/89 type hands, cold calling $25 like this with acting left behind him so I think we can rule those out. It feels more like ATs/JJ/QQ along with a few pairs like 77/88/99. Against this range, only AT has you in bad shape, the rest of the hands would all be calls.
 
why does race play any part of this scenario? Just curious how this affects anything?

You call and see the turn, or raise to $135 and put villain on the spot.
The same way age or marital status or hair volume play a part. Just part of the story?

The real question may be why did you focus just on the race part?
 
The same way age or marital status or hair volume play a part. Just part of the story?

The real question may be why did you focus just on the race part?
Age/race/soberness - all of these things play a role in our "reads" for better or for worse. I think it's appropriate to talk about these things instead of acting like the don't exist at the table.
 
*Appreciate any feedback/criticism/roasting!*

Background:
$1/$3 live at Saracen Casino in Pine Bluff, AR. $500 max buy-in. Rake is 10% with a $5 max per hand. 8-handed on a Sunday afternoon. Hero is a 28yo white guy. Chatty, talking sports and poker with a few players around me at the table, and relatively active. I try to hunt squeeze spots and am working on bluffs with my 3bet and 4bet range. I’ve been *very* active the past couple orbits, but I’ve also been getting smacked with the deck with playable pre-flop hands (lots of AK, KQs, AJs, etc.). Don’t have a lot of profits to show for it, but I’ve opened a good number of hands. Main villain in this hand is a ~50yo bald white guy. The room was running two tables, his table broke, and he came over to join our table. His wife was also playing at my table and sitting to my left. Her and I had been chatting a bunch, and when her husband came over to join us, she said something to the effect of, “I’m just here to have fun, he’s the real poker player in the family.” He’d been at the table for maybe an orbit at this point, no real hands of note. Hero bought in for $400 and is the effective stack with ~$350. Villain has probably ~$600 in front.

Pre-flop:
BTN straddle to $6
SB Folds
BB folds
UTG folds
UTG-1 (Hero) opens AcKh for $25
LJ folds
HJ (villain) calls
CO folds
BTN folds

Pre-flop thoughts:
4x open has been the table standard. Would’ve bumped up if there were any limpers ahead of me, and would’ve 3bet an open ahead of me (not a lot of 3betting happening at this table besides myself, and basically zero 3bet [or 4bet] bluffing). HJ calling range in a button straddle formation is relatively wide, and there might be some stronger hands sprinkled in here with the table’s relative aversion to 3betting. Let’s go hit a flop.

Flop:
($55 in pot after rake)

Ts 6c 4d

Hero bets $18

Villain x/r to $45

Hero?
Flop action:

Hero calls

Flop thoughts:

Definitely thought about checking as I’m out of position and villain will likely have a lot of continues (most pairs, anything wrapping around the T, all the suited connectors that flopped gutshots, etc.). But, a 1/3 pot bet still reps overpairs, top pair, and flopped sets, and I can barrel all turned broadways and put a lot of pressure on villain’s underpairs or middle pairs and fold out his open enders or gutshots that have good equity against me; plan is to go about 2/3rds pot on turned broadways, setting up a possible pot-sized river jam. If villain folds a gutshot, a BDFD/BDSD with six pair outs, 99-77 (too tight), 55, or other middling holdings, that’s a-OK.

The x/r is fun. Villain announces it verbally and then moves the chips into the pot. It’s super small, giving me a great price to continue, and I try to think about whether villain knows it’s a small x/r or not. Unsure. 9 sets, four combos of 87 suited for a double gutter (I’d probably 3bet 87 pre in this formation, but wouldn’t expect villain to), and four combos of 75 suited for an open ender. If I’m giving him all 87 suited and 75 suited (a stretch, right?), it seems reasonable to include the two combos of 64 suited. Some people in the thread are ruling those out, and that’s fair, but I’d 3bet or flat those in late position without much fear of being 3bet behind in this game. And I wouldn’t be shocked to see some QQ or JJ that’s hesitant to 3bet pre, so let’s give him 6 combos total of those (half combos of each). And let’s give him both remaining combos of AT suited, though I’m not sure those x/r. Villains in this game don’t frequently x/r draws in favorable spots such as this one, but the wife’s comments about villain “being the poker player in the family” or whatever makes me think he’s capable. 19 value combos, 8 bluff combos. This is a great board for his open enders and double gutters to x/r since I’ll have so many unpaired broadways that have a decision re: continuing. I think we can call given this price and our showdown value. With a AK of spades, clubs, or diamonds, I'd *think* about 3bet bluffing here, but I think I'd think better of it. I don't know what 3bets for value I'd really have here, and if he's bluffing let's give him some rope to keep going.

Turn:

($145 in pot)

Ts 6c 4d (2c)

Hero checks

Villain bets $45

Hero?
 
78s and 57s are the only major draws I see on this board. Feels a lot more like AT/KT raising to see where they're at, possibly JJ, and some sets if this villain doesn't like slow playing. Honestly against most middle age+ players I don't hate a fold here, no real backdoor equity, and your A and K outs might be dirty making him two pair, might cut my losses and take a better spot.

Edit - give us more time to reply lol. Probably folding the turn. Same sized bet feels like medium strength pair here, and sometimes still those decent open ended draws. Mehh, move on.
 
78s and 57s are the only major draws I see on this board. Feels a lot more like AT/KT raising to see where they're at, possibly JJ, and some sets if this villain doesn't like slow playing. Honestly against most middle age+ players I don't hate a fold here, no real backdoor equity, and your A and K outs might be dirty making him two pair, might cut my losses and take a better spot.
V good point I forgot to mention about maybe only having 3 pair outs instead of 6 pair outs.
 
Villain feels super weak here, wanting protection against his 77-99 type of hands. If I was feeling frisky, I think a nice raise here would end the hand. In real life, I think I often just fold here and move on to the next, even though I realize villain doesn't want to get stacks in and a raise could well work. In my opinion, hands like these, and having the confidence to pull the trigger in spots, moves you from being a solid/small winner to a crusher in these kinds of stakes.
 
Edit - give us more time to reply lol. Probably folding the turn. Same sized bet feels like medium strength pair here, and sometimes still those decent open ended draws. Mehh, move on.

Don't listen to him! I want to know what happens! Shove on the river!

:p
 
78s and 57s are the only major draws I see on this board. Feels a lot more like AT/KT raising to see where they're at, possibly JJ, and some sets if this villain doesn't like slow playing. Honestly against most middle age+ players I don't hate a fold here, no real backdoor equity, and your A and K outs might be dirty making him two pair, might cut my losses and take a better spot.

Edit - give us more time to reply lol. Probably folding the turn. Same sized bet feels like medium strength pair here, and sometimes still those decent open ended draws. Mehh, move on.
I don't think KT will be in range, so thinking ATs (less likely because we block it with our own AK and some tighter players don't call $25 pre with AT) + all the pairs, with the occasional set mixed in.
 
78s and 57s are the only major draws I see on this board. Feels a lot more like AT/KT raising to see where they're at, possibly JJ, and some sets if this villain doesn't like slow playing. Honestly against most middle age+ players I don't hate a fold here, no real backdoor equity, and your A and K outs might be dirty making him two pair, might cut my losses and take a better spot.

Edit - give us more time to reply lol. Probably folding the turn. Same sized bet feels like medium strength pair here, and sometimes still those decent open ended draws. Mehh, move on.
Hahah my b. My first time posting a hand history here, didn't want to drag it out unnecessarily.
 
Oh okay, rad. I was gonna just post the whole thing in one go but didn't want to get flogged.
Yeah you're good. I think, since it's a message board, that if you want real time thinking and feedback, you will want to give it more time. Once you introduce more results, people become results oriented and their answers will be skewed. Some people on here will wait as long as 24+ hours to post updates of the following streets (but that is just evil imo lol)
 
Two overs, no draw = fold for me even though its only 1/3 pot.
You need 10 outs on the turn to improve to a winning hand to call; you dont have them :(
Too much beats you now and your odds of improving are poor.
 
Here’s a handy laminated chart I keep by my computer when playing online

image.jpg
 
Two overs, no draw = fold for me even though its only 1/3 pot.
You need 10 outs on the turn to improve to a winning hand to call; you dont have them :(
Too much beats you now and your odds of improving are poor.
Fwiw (and it might not change anything), I'm not calling with the hopes of improving. I called flop and would be calling turn because I think I beat enough logical bluffs that make up his range right now, and I'll evaluate rivers. That might be a leak in and of itself, but I probably should've clarified that in my thoughts.
 
I guess without a read, I'd be inclined to think he's not bluffing.

On a Ts 6c 4d (2c) board I can see V calling with all PPs: QQ, JJ, TT, 99, 88, 77, 66, 44, AT, KTs, QTs, JTs.
I have seen A6s and A4s raise flop to try and take it down as the only card that comes clos to hitting your EP raising range over the straddle is the T. I dont think they would bet turn though. I dont think 55 raises
For bluffs 78s, 89s, maybe 75s (50%) so I think more combos that beat you here than bluff?

GL!
 
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Just catching up. Preflop is pretty standard.

Flop: This board is probably one of those mix between check and bet boards. It misses your range, but honestly pretty much misses his too. You could bet for value targeting worse aces. As played, it's fine. Your small bet made it cheap for him to take control of the hand, though....so unless board changes, he's driving this train from here on out. (Thumb's up to villain)

Turn: Small bet by Villain, probably for value. I am guessing he has that 10. You are in a tough spot, as he is giving you good odds, but you are most likely not good. I probably just let it go here. I would rather be putting in money while in control of the betting....and if I am calling I want something besides A high. You are in a bad spot. I would also not try to bluff here. You don't have much to represent.
 
Flop action:

Hero calls

Flop thoughts:

Definitely thought about checking as I’m out of position and villain will likely have a lot of continues (most pairs, anything wrapping around the T, all the suited connectors that flopped gutshots, etc.). But, a 1/3 pot bet still reps overpairs, top pair, and flopped sets, and I can barrel all turned broadways and put a lot of pressure on villain’s underpairs or middle pairs and fold out his open enders or gutshots that have good equity against me; plan is to go about 2/3rds pot on turned broadways, setting up a possible pot-sized river jam. If villain folds a gutshot, a BDFD/BDSD with six pair outs, 99-77 (too tight), 55, or other middling holdings, that’s a-OK.

The x/r is fun. Villain announces it verbally and then moves the chips into the pot. It’s super small, giving me a great price to continue, and I try to think about whether villain knows it’s a small x/r or not. Unsure. 9 sets, four combos of 87 suited for a double gutter (I’d probably 3bet 87 pre in this formation, but wouldn’t expect villain to), and four combos of 75 suited for an open ender. If I’m giving him all 87 suited and 75 suited (a stretch, right?), it seems reasonable to include the two combos of 64 suited. Some people in the thread are ruling those out, and that’s fair, but I’d 3bet or flat those in late position without much fear of being 3bet behind in this game. And I wouldn’t be shocked to see some QQ or JJ that’s hesitant to 3bet pre, so let’s give him 6 combos total of those (half combos of each). And let’s give him both remaining combos of AT suited, though I’m not sure those x/r. Villains in this game don’t frequently x/r draws in favorable spots such as this one, but the wife’s comments about villain “being the poker player in the family” or whatever makes me think he’s capable. 19 value combos, 8 bluff combos. This is a great board for his open enders and double gutters to x/r since I’ll have so many unpaired broadways that have a decision re: continuing. I think we can call given this price and our showdown value. With a AK of spades, clubs, or diamonds, I'd *think* about 3bet bluffing here, but I think I'd think better of it. I don't know what 3bets for value I'd really have here, and if he's bluffing let's give him some rope to keep going.

Turn:

($145 in pot)

Ts 6c 4d (2c)

Hero checks

Villain bets $45

Hero?
Turn action:

Hero calls

Turn thoughts:

Checking range on this card. Turn bet comes relatively quickly. Again, villain announces the bet verbally, and it’s very much in the “same amount as last time” kind of cadence. Turn bet makes me reevaluate, “should I be giving him 53 suited?” Ehhhh, maybe 1 or 2 combos? For some players, suited connectors are suited connectors are suited connectors, and they’re gonna play ‘em all whatever the action. For others, not so much. Even in a game without much squeezing, and even being in relatively late position, that’s usually hitting the muck. Can add in anywhere from zero to four combos, but with this line work let’s split the baby and give him two combos. Something like 21 value combos and 8 bluffs. 8c7c and 7c5c picked up additional equity. Always gotta factor in the live poker factor of unexpected value bets (something like JTs) and unexpected air (someone else at this table ran Q8o as a bluff on a similar board in an earlier hand). Again at this price, I think we have a call, though I think we’re often losing.

River:

($235 in pot)

Ts 6c 4d (2c) (Td)

Hero checks

Villain bets $100

Hero?
 
Flop: I probably fold the flop here against an unknown.

I tend to be pretty nitty against unknowns in 1/2 and 1/3 casino games. My experience with low-stakes players is that most don't think about things like how this flop hits your UTG opening range and what your downbet means. They think more like, "I have a ten/six/77, he probably has AK, so I'm going to raise to protect my pair." As I get time against specific players, I adjust of course, but I default to nitty absent other factors.

Against these types of players, I like to wait for fat value moments.

Turn: Fold.
River: Fold.
 
Turn action:

Hero calls

Turn thoughts:

Checking range on this card. Turn bet comes relatively quickly. Again, villain announces the bet verbally, and it’s very much in the “same amount as last time” kind of cadence. Turn bet makes me reevaluate, “should I be giving him 53 suited?” Ehhhh, maybe 1 or 2 combos? For some players, suited connectors are suited connectors are suited connectors, and they’re gonna play ‘em all whatever the action. For others, not so much. Even in a game without much squeezing, and even being in relatively late position, that’s usually hitting the muck. Can add in anywhere from zero to four combos, but with this line work let’s split the baby and give him two combos. Something like 21 value combos and 8 bluffs. 8c7c and 7c5c picked up additional equity. Always gotta factor in the live poker factor of unexpected value bets (something like JTs) and unexpected air (someone else at this table ran Q8o as a bluff on a similar board in an earlier hand). Again at this price, I think we have a call, though I think we’re often losing.

River:

($235 in pot)

Ts 6c 4d (2c) (Td)

Hero checks

Villain bets $100

Hero?
You have a shitty bluff catcher. Even cant catch all the bluffs (like 55). You only have to be good here 25%, but I don't think you are. You either jam as a complete bluff....which needs to work 1/2 the time, or you fold.

Villain is my hero. He played this hand better than you....even if you call and get lucky.

To answer your question: Spewy AF.
 
How much do you have behind?
Started the hand ~$350 effective, so I've got only about ~$230 behind or so. I think I've got little to no fold equity with a x/r jam, and idk what I rep besides one combo of rivered quads. But that might be blinkered on my part.
 
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Turn action:

Hero calls

Turn thoughts:

Checking range on this card. Turn bet comes relatively quickly. Again, villain announces the bet verbally, and it’s very much in the “same amount as last time” kind of cadence. Turn bet makes me reevaluate, “should I be giving him 53 suited?” Ehhhh, maybe 1 or 2 combos? For some players, suited connectors are suited connectors are suited connectors, and they’re gonna play ‘em all whatever the action. For others, not so much. Even in a game without much squeezing, and even being in relatively late position, that’s usually hitting the muck. Can add in anywhere from zero to four combos, but with this line work let’s split the baby and give him two combos. Something like 21 value combos and 8 bluffs. 8c7c and 7c5c picked up additional equity. Always gotta factor in the live poker factor of unexpected value bets (something like JTs) and unexpected air (someone else at this table ran Q8o as a bluff on a similar board in an earlier hand). Again at this price, I think we have a call, though I think we’re often losing.

River:

($235 in pot)

Ts 6c 4d (2c) (Td)

Hero checks

Villain bets $100

Hero?
(convo seems to have slowed, so gonna wrap this one up).

River action:

Hero calls.

River thoughts:
A small weird thing: villain doesn’t verbally announce his bet this time as he has on the previous streets. He doesn’t even really seem to calculate the pot size, he just kind of quickly and a little shakily (though we all know shaky hands can cut both ways) pushes a $100 stack towards the middle. Kind of a spring-loaded bet, where the others had been a little more controlled. That’s a deviation, and I flag it, before trying to think through the hand.

River is good and bad? Cuts TT down to one combo, eliminates AdTd and KdTd from range, though as I’m thinking through the spot on the river I wonder if there’s some ATo or other Tx that I was discounting wrongly. As far as eliminating sets goes, we’d obviously rather see a 6 or a 4, since some of villain’s Tx that took this line and likely intended to check-back the river now upgrades to trips. QQ and JJ seem like mandatory checkbacks, and underpairs, middle pairs, and whatever-weird-two-pairs-could-show-up-here have an interesting decision w/r/t checking back with showdown value or turning themselves into bluffs to target overpairs.

Is villain the kind of guy that bets $100 because it seems like a big amount of money without thinking about things like pot size? (I think @Senzrock makes a good implied point on that issue: villain could be thinking about the money in terms of money rather than in terms of big blinds and/or pot size. I.e. villain thinks of the $25 open as $25 rather than effectively 4 big blinds since there’s a straddle on.) Shouldn’t his whole range be going at least a little bigger? Is he repping a rivered trips and trying to get called by an overpair? Is he astute enough to turn some pairs or counterfeited two pairs into bluffs here to fold out overpairs, rather than just frustratedly check back (with the winning hand, but still)? Are there other bluffing with the best hand combos or hands where villain has no idea whether he’s bluffing or value betting (like a random 99 or something)? Without much hand history, the wife’s comment about him “being the poker player in the family” is giving me conflicting information—he should be capable of bluffing given that info, but also smarter about sizing, right?

I take about 15-20 seconds and call, given the price and the way villain conducts himself on the river. The deviation from verbal betting, the shaky motions, and the just pushing a $100 stack into the middle without seeming to think about the pot size were live tells tipped me towards calling. That’s probably giving myself too much credit and extrapolating too much from live reads (and there’s the obvious caveat that I still lose to any pair that’s bluffing). Obviously, plenty of the time I’m going to be shown a rivered quads (half-expecting TT that was just betting small the whole way because it was terrified that I would fold lol), 66 or 44 for a rivered boat, or Tx that can confidently value bet this river.

I honestly think this is a pretty trivial call in theory with the ~40% pot price, our showdown value, and there being enough theoretical unpaired bluffs in his betting range to give us the right price. But I think we’ll lose more often than the theory would suggest, particularly because most people (myself included) just don’t triple barrel as much as we should, and, as @grebe and others note, we lose to any pair turning itself into a bluff.

Results:

Villain shows 8c7c (pair of TT, 8-kicker).
Hero shows AcKh (pair of TT, A-kicker).
Hero wins $435 pot.

Post-hand thoughts:

Villain flopped a double gutter, turned a combo draw, missed, and knew he needed to bluff to win. We scoop (yay), but this is the kind of spot where I can easily conflate “winning the pot” with “playing it well.” Many of the comments in this thread are nailing the distinction between the two and helping me realize the various spots where I likely went wrong in this hand. In particular, it can be tough for me to toggle out of “here’s what I think the theoretical play is here” (which I’m probably wrong as to what the correct answer is there, anyway) or give villains hands that might be “in range” but they seldom have at $1/$3. And I’m prone to trying to rely on live tells to confirm those suspicions. The “live tell” was maybe right here, but that could’ve just been a quirky one-off thing that confirmed bad habits for me moving forward.

His exact combo makes me curious if his only river bluffs are specifically open-enders and double gutters that turned BDFDs. If so, he’s reduced to two surefire bluffing combos instead of eight. (Not to mention the reasonable doubt in this thread from some people that villain even has 75 suited). In that world, a smaller bet size also makes sense because he has almost zero bluffs, though I think this bet size is still too small. Villains in this game aren’t used to getting looked up with A-high on a relatively dry runout (with good reason), so I think villain would think his $100 bet would fold out those hands.

Going back in the hand: I thought a flop check or 1/3 bet was standard here on this sort of board, but there’s clearly disagreement on that point so I likely need to re-evaluate. The flop x/r is such a good price, but I wonder if on this board I should only be calling (and small frequency 3betting) flop with my suited AK that have BDFDs and other suited broadways that can turn combo draws. Even if villain has enough air to make this flop call profitable, it might be a good time to just exploit fold and wait for a better spot, as others suggested.

Even if this hand/spot itself isn’t very interesting or has a clear answer that I disregarded, I’m trying to navigate bluffcatching in these games where people might not really have super defined ranges or be thinking through pot odds and bet sizing. In that vein, I’m also thinking through what a complete calling range would be here. Giving villain XX and keeping the same linework, I’ve got 24 combos of overpairs, some amount of Tx (in this formation, likely only suited tens, so two combos each of AT – T9). Definitely river x/r TT, 66, and 44 for value (getting shown the bad news here when I have 44). Maybe x/r AT suited for thin value, though I can easily be punished for going too thin. So, are we just calling overpairs and Tx? Or for this price do we need to bring a few more hands into our calling range? 99 – 77 and 55 are obviously stronger, but I don’t like that they block villain’s bluffs. And there’s the permanent problem that people at low stakes just don’t bluff enough, meaning some hands that could theoretically be added in should probably just need to see themselves back out again.

***Thank y’all so much for the feedback. Lots to work on!
 

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