hey guys - as of today we have *ONE SPOT* left for our december bootcamp (and 4 for january). if you'd like to grab the last seat, click the link in description and sign up today (we will sell out this week). see u guys there!
@alexanderteran7812Ай бұрын
Bro the original joke about tournament people here 1:09 had me rolling on the ground laughing
@leehjonesАй бұрын
@@alexanderteran7812 Bro the original joke about tournament people had me rolling on the ground in sympathetic pain with those who have been catheterized.
@richl344029 күн бұрын
Where do I sign up?
@fizzfox888614 күн бұрын
My best decision in poker was to leave poker, start my own company and invest in crypto and other assets like crazy - if you're patient and willing to work hard, poker is definitely the wrong path to take especially considering the opportunity-cost.
@BrettMcNary29 күн бұрын
Answer=start with 200k
@seththomas8966Ай бұрын
this content being free still blows my mind. Marc is the goat
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
bles u
@YouVeeeАй бұрын
@@hungryhorsepokerfrom someone who’s been after it for over a decade and slowly had to learn all these lessons it’s actually low key tilting as fuck it’s all free and just out there for all the dorks to view
@sneakkyz3696Ай бұрын
He’s definitely one of the best
@sneakkyz3696Ай бұрын
@@YouVeeeyou gotta understand the idiots aren’t watching it 😂. Don’t worry
@betadecay6503Ай бұрын
@@YouVeeethe majority of people who watch these videos are not going to put the work in. Marc gives them a few basic pieces of advice, they think they know how to play poker, they go and lose all their money. This being free is good for the game and good for you if you've put in the work.
@Jimmy.WilliamsАй бұрын
St. Louis musician who moved to LA for music 30 years ago and plays poker for fun...this might be one of the best poker videos I've seen. Love your stuff broseph, many, many thanks for the vids!
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
music bois unite
@NCiTYB34ST20108 күн бұрын
Been playing 20years now got to agree, probably the best video Iv ever seen for poker. ♥️
@myCuzinVinnyАй бұрын
Marc has quickly become the best in the KZbin coaching content game . Thank you Marc great videos
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@BlackSheep_216Ай бұрын
I agree
@myCuzinVinnyАй бұрын
Shout out to Bart, gazzy B and Galfond but Marc has got my attention at this point .
@arthurt7426 күн бұрын
For any newbies: The lower the stake and the closer you get to Texas, the wider their range should be.
@andytromans9588Ай бұрын
This is gold, pure gold. Thank you. I just found you through your shorts popping up on my KZbin and I'm glad I did. Keep up the good work
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@dopaz9616Ай бұрын
Hungry Horse fans when they play 10000 hands and never see a flop of Js 9s 2c
@peternguyen1911Ай бұрын
When will I get to look at that Sweet Baby?
@joshuabowkley349024 күн бұрын
I have seen very many Jx9x2x flops.
@FVine23 күн бұрын
@@joshuabowkley3490 Cringe
@EricPollarrd21 күн бұрын
J62 far better. But yeh, 12 million hands and 20yrs in I’ve never seen a single flop that matches these millionaire streamers.
@joshuabowkley349021 күн бұрын
@EricPollarrd Dude, I've played 4 million this year.
@faux36Ай бұрын
Thank you for getting straight to the point, being organized, talking with purpose (speed wise) , as well as clearly and concisely, and not over explaining or being mundane and boring with no emotion. You know what you are talking about and speak with that confidence.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@UpliftSomeoneАй бұрын
Stop teaching my opponents how to play... great material as usual!
@sohiljain5664Ай бұрын
Love your videos man! Have helped me improve quite a bit.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@1EyedJack51Ай бұрын
Great video !!!! Thank you for taking your time to make these videos buddy…..much appreciated as it takes a lot of time to edit etc…..The best “Real World” type thought process was great to listen to.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰
@the_jeremiahАй бұрын
As always you are a KING! Love this content.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰
@Brandon-Pokerbro28 күн бұрын
Favorite new channel..about to pick the game back up live. Really appreciate your insight.
@RunningGood29 күн бұрын
Legitimately one of the best simplified tutorials for low stakes theory I've found on KZbin! Bravo!
@jason0joonАй бұрын
Been using your methods at 2/3 live cash game and I've been sustaining 20+BB/hour for over 200 hours now. I actually noticed a few people using your lines too so i node locked your method in Pio to play against those people too haha
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
sneaky!
@TrentonO3000Ай бұрын
These videos are gold for low stakes. I will def be doing the crash course when it's available. Thank you Mr. Horse
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@TimeNap6 күн бұрын
This is honestly a lot better content than I expected. Focus is solely on the process and not results oriented. Good stuff.
@tofftof1675Ай бұрын
You are awesome! Good videos, good energy, good advices, evrything's sooo good. Thank you !
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@Elscorch076Күн бұрын
I really like this one. I'm gonna try and implement this advice... Waiting patiently on the release of the 7 day bootcamp. I know you're busy, so take your time, but hurry up!
@marcs101Ай бұрын
Sick video, really like how you articulate your thought process out. Very easy to understand. Might have to jump on one of these boot camps. This information shouldn’t be free lol, but thx
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
the bootcamp has all the sauce, i promise 🥰
@noelassoued244125 күн бұрын
Absolutely sick content! Thank you
@AcidxAnarchy27 күн бұрын
You are or were one of the commentators at hcl? That's awesome. I've been playing poker online recreationally for years, I've seen 1000 people try to teach poker on KZbin, sell courses etc etc. But this is probably the most realistic, down to earth and easy to understand way I've ever seen it presented. 👏
@fischguy7779 күн бұрын
Excellent way to break down the thought processes!
@LewisFulhamАй бұрын
Even though you say this is primarily for cash games, I can really see this still helping out the torture-enjoying tournament oriented players (like myself), thanks king :)
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@jesswhite42629 күн бұрын
Probably the most practical and applicable info I’ve ever seen presented on the topic of how to get started and build to that $100k level. So appreciative of the value here!
@hungryhorsepoker29 күн бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@damienbyrne384Ай бұрын
Definitely the best and easiest to understand poker content online. Love all the videos. I try implement the ideas in my local game but i dont think it translates well to low stakes tournament played in a pub on a friday night....
@ddelrussАй бұрын
You guys are taking off. At my local poker room I keep hearing "Hungry Horse" at the tables so the secret is out. Now we're really going to see who is the biggest boy possible. Thanks for being an awesome guy. BTW, your video on shrooms on your other channel is the most meaningful video I've seen in a long time.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
the biggest boy posisble!!
@Gueberry29 күн бұрын
I need that processor power to keep up you get so much information in before 15min mark it's crazy. Great video 👍
@axel-uh2zk26 күн бұрын
Loved it mate, thanks a LOT !!
@RaquelBaldelomar29 күн бұрын
Great content, Marc! You’re the GOAT! Having an in depth video on how to assign people ranges would be really helpful. I realize I need to work on this in my game. And ranging fast on the table definitely requires practice. Having a study plan off the felt for how to range people would be great!
@georgeargyris543Ай бұрын
I think a good future video to piggyback off of this one is to talk about Live Poker variance. I think when people talk about “bankroll” they are often conflating tournaments and online poker where the standard deviation is much larger. Breaking down potential wr’s live and how that affects live variance could be useful to some. There are winrates in live where risk of ruin is next to nothing! Lol😂
@jonathanhenderson9422Ай бұрын
This content is invaluable for someone like myself. I made a living playing online during the early poker boom years; then Black Friday happened and I moved on to other endeavors. Those endeavors have become a dead end too, and right now I'm making plans to try to make a go at playing live for a living. Just have to figure out where I want to move to play at. I've heard a lot of great things about how juicy Texas poker is now, but I'm also close to a lot of casinos in Oklahoma that I might try out first.
@leehjonesАй бұрын
I am so very glad that so few people watch these videos. And of those that do, few actually apply the information in them. I know for a fact that I don't come anywhere close to 100%, but even if I can apply 25% of what I learn here, my hourly rate ⏩
@LukeNieuwland-17 күн бұрын
Sick Video! well done 👏
@SuhendraLie15 күн бұрын
Honestly each of these FREE videos is better than most paid courses I have purchased. And I've purchased a few of them. If you're taking notes, x0.75 speed might be better for clearer absorption but cause there's a lot to absorb.
@ngotheanh208729 күн бұрын
You are so true for the bankroll part. I started to play poker from March 2024 with only 0.02c/0.04c online table. But after grinding so much online sites, studying theory and moving up stake by a little bit now I can afford to play live 5$/10$ cash game with a decent win rate too 😊
@hungryhorsepoker29 күн бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@angelma908714 күн бұрын
Me encantó este video, lo fui viendo de a poco porque hablo español, pero aprendi mucho, siento que encontré una joya de canal, solo veia zeros poker pero no sabía lo de los "default", ni tampoco sabia como identificar bien la mano del rival. Por la forma en que lo exolicaste creo es algo que puedo insertar en mi proceso mental, me ha costado harto aprender a jugar poker pero me dejaste bastantes cosas claras en este video 😅 ❤
@hungryhorsepoker14 күн бұрын
🥰🥰🥰🥰
@rottviperАй бұрын
Great work , continue like that. Maybe i will do the bootcamp one of this future months . On min 20:30 , if the board paired ,what you do if villain lead jam, and if villain check.
@acralbert15 күн бұрын
so much value, love it. How about the defaults in TURN OOP? ;)
@coratoraYT28 күн бұрын
I love your videos. Maybe it's just because I've been slowly learning poker the past year, but your videos just *click* into place for me. That rarely happens with other explanation videos for me. Maybe next year I won't be wasting anyone's time and I can join a course.
@hungryhorsepoker28 күн бұрын
🥰🥰
@noThankyou-g5cАй бұрын
just a suggestion but I’d love to see more examples with more middling hands. Like second pair, a gut shot no flush draw, even just total air. I feel like that’s the majority of hands and those are the spots where I feel like I’m clicking buttons. And like… if we follow ur strategy literally, doesn’t that mean we’re double barreling 100% of range IP? maybe you’re supposed to 🤷 I’m definitely not good enough at poker to know
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
never have i suggested to follow any strategy step by step. in fact, i advocate the opposite. ask the right questions. don’t memorize any blanket strategy. good players ask questions rather than looking for exact answers.
@terencehill3972Ай бұрын
I guess you have to buy the course for more of the sauce 😉 I'm also working on studying his approach. I now often find myself on the turn thinking, 'They're capped! Omfg they're capped!!' And then after my overbet, I find myself on the river with d*ck in hand and don't know what to do LOL
@noThankyou-g5cАй бұрын
@@hungryhorsepoker fair and for the record I’m not trying to criticize the videos or the advice/strategy. Your videos have legitimately helped me a lot. There’s a lot of basic intuition stuff in poker that really isn’t explained anywhere that I could find outside of this channel. Like in my experience literally just seeing you fold hands that wouldn’t have made it into most people’s vlogs made me go from a slightly losing to winning player in my games. In that same vein I do think walking through more middling/shit hands would be helpful but I also get it if that’s what the courses are for 🫡
@jacobgraham4166Ай бұрын
@@terencehill3972ask what would you do if you had the nuts on the river
@philslusarzАй бұрын
This video is awesome! I am grateful for the content.
@AlexanderGarcia-g2o29 күн бұрын
Very informative. Super thank you!
@mattbunker3982Ай бұрын
Fantastic content as usual -- thanks so much!
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@mjriemenАй бұрын
I would love a Hungry Horse video regarding not just the hands… but things like bankroll management, hours, etc. They other important things that are no specifically related to playing a single hand.
@fredbutler436629 күн бұрын
How can I practice ranging my opponents And how do I practice the 30 second drills
@fredbutler436629 күн бұрын
Can I get a response Or are you just skipping over me
@mattuse_6550Ай бұрын
Absolutely agree about the goals, love that this is in a poker video😂❤
@amitchell437Ай бұрын
Thank you Marc!
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@flexurmindАй бұрын
Marc on the river when you think on the inverse, at the end, you are thinking what size works for the part of the range that you want to fold( if a bluff) and the part of the range that will call ( if value betting) right?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
ya!
@OMC_Papa8 күн бұрын
1:40 Let me just stop you right there You're saying you're playing in a 2/5 cash game It got to the button and 4 other people passed on flatting or opening? Not like any 2/5 cash game I've ever played
@animarokuАй бұрын
My experience is that you should go egregious with the 4 flush board with a4s. Maybe not all in, but definitely not 200-250. One of the most important aspects in fish thinking is that objective hand strength is what important, and I don't think fish folds all in with kh flush, because it is the "2nd nuts". I think they can fold q or j in all in bet, so I would go 400-500 (3x-4x) because they can be sticky there even with th flush. I don't think they are capable folding high flushes, and they got too much for me to seddle for 1.5x pot
@therealmattviolet24 күн бұрын
Great video! Can anyone recommend some good online poker sites? Im always suspicious of online casinos so I would really appreciate some help 😊🙏
@matthiasschmitz766729 күн бұрын
Thx again for this great information 😊
@soundofsilence21Ай бұрын
Excellent video, as usual. Do you have any tips for practicing ranging when we are not in a hand? Seems like this would help profile opponents as well as developing a useful skill. Presumably a good percentage of the time you'll fail to see results (if there's no showdown), but anytime there is a showdown there's an opportunity to range at least one opponent. Maybe one session you try to range raisers at least a couple of hands per round. The next session you try to range callers.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
i try to do it in every hand, for every player in the hand. start off with one and ramp it up.
@jorymptКүн бұрын
What path would you recommend do actually go from feeling like you could be successful to becoming successful in poker, definitely not a winning player currently on live or online (lifetime) but generally have a reasonable understanding.
@juanmoscoso029 күн бұрын
at 10:50 on that specific board, if they were nutted, couldnt they raise their hand for value since you have bet twice into them big and they just think you arent folding?
@juhdah214617 күн бұрын
Seems great. I will put it to use very soon. Thanks!
@20minutepieАй бұрын
I didn't know that I didn't know anything about poker until I watched this video. The hand range part is what I think about most these days. In low stakes, villains range is soooooo wide, I didn't process it street by street before. I will now. Great video. Thank you.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰
@brennankaplan933829 күн бұрын
11:10 why would you bet big if you haven’t narrowed out hands like 77 or 22 etc
@SamChouinard125 күн бұрын
Hey Mark, I'm wondering how you study and do drills by yourself? I know you talked about timed range and rtp drills, how do I go about doing that by myself? Are there websites that offer this kind of practice? Thanks
@minecraeft3316Ай бұрын
Hi marc love the videos can you possibly upload a video in the future on live reads and how u can exploit them?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
yes
@lawdog8118 күн бұрын
24:46 what tools/apps do you recommend for your ranging drills?
@couteauxduseignanx462519 сағат бұрын
cool website is range analyzer (free). otherwise flopzilla is the top imo.
@AlluckyTV29 күн бұрын
Thanks for the video. I found it very helpful.
@Mossy51509 күн бұрын
This channel has made me so much better, but occasionally I find myself seeing flops during live play that don't come J92, and honestly, I just have no clue how to proceed
@realjoeroesslerАй бұрын
I was NOT smooched when I played at the casino my first two times. Decided it was time to learn. Turned $2 into $300 on Microstakes. Moving up thanks to you. Now using that $300 at my local 1/3 game. Smoochies.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
omg smooch
@FenrirFinance29 күн бұрын
Was waiting to hear about bankroll management most of the video. How many hours per session, what is the win rate like, when should you leave a table? How much should you make per week or per month. How should you allocate your bank roll. You can't say it isn't important when setting a number like 100K in a year. Variance exists even if you have all these skills already. You can be a winning player and not know when to leave a table. You could have many winning sessions and still be no where near 100K by the end because you're either not increasing stakes enough or quickly enough. Some of your audience aren't complete beginners, and have been playing for well over 10 years, so it's great to hear more about how much money you were able to use as a bank roll, what stakes you played, how often, what the win/loss rate is like to reach 100K by the end of the year. How many sessions. % gain, because this is also important math. How many losses can you afford etc.
@danbreilin916929 күн бұрын
If you're a winning player leave the table when there are no recreational players/ no players who will make mistakes or when you are tired or hungry or first sign of frustration/ loss of focus. Bankroll management is individual. Your win rate might be around 10bb per hour but you can still have a losing month if you don't put in enough hours playing your A game. When you feel comfortable and the table looks soft take a shot at higher stakes. Visualize yourself winning at higher levels, act as if you're already a winner, feel the confidence and gratitude NOW in the present moment of winning at higher stakes, embody it day and night... there is ABSOLUTELY NO doubt we will win $100,000 + in 2025
@FenrirFinance29 күн бұрын
@@danbreilin9169 I love this comment! Thank you so much!
@jasongleason625228 күн бұрын
For me, I table change to weaker player games.. If you put in enough time at one particular poker room, you'll identify really fast who is stronger verse weaker.. As stated, get up when you're tired or not focusing.. I tend to set daily goals, when reached, I make a judgment call on how profitable the current table situation is whether to stay or not.. Bankroll: Say you start with $1000.. Once you earn $1000 put your original $1000 back in your bank account, play with that NEW $1000 & You'll never be at risk of loosing a single dollar.. From there: Don't play in games that you will lose your entire roll in 1 session by putting it all at risk.. Every session, I take my buy in & 1/2 my winnings & put it into my bankroll.. The other half I enjoy.. So your bankroll will continually grow, $1000 to $2000 to $100000.. You get the idea.. Heck you can put 100% of your winnings into your bank roll if you want it to build faster..
@FenrirFinance28 күн бұрын
@@jasongleason6252 very veryy helpful thank you so much. I usually can identify unwise players, changing tables is really smart. There was one night a dutch traveler came by and was just splashing all in blind every single hand lmao. Unfortunately he wasn't at my table but the one across from me. Someone requested to transfer before I did and they sat down with $200 and left with $1600 which is insane, in less than an hour.
@Racing_Tendencies24 күн бұрын
BROOO FREAKING AMAZING CONTENT 🎉🎉as always. Thanks for the dope lesson 👊
@stevesullivan6681Ай бұрын
Excellent material. When are you going to write your book?
@stevengm728528 күн бұрын
love you channel . can you do a side bar on winners tilt ? enjoy your flow.
@Andre-gy5ml29 күн бұрын
when you say drills what program do you recommend for this?
@MikeyD8716Ай бұрын
At 12:00, as the villain, if I have KQ in this spot and someone comes over the top on me with that big of a check raise I would consider a fold. Not many people post flop are check raising huge as a bluff that early in the hand. If the villain folds the hero only wins like $40-45. Maybe I call if I also have a straight draw.
@josephineting8080Ай бұрын
Am I the only one confused here with what he said in previous example at 7:40 that when holding AK on A7x board villain is not going to raise with set 7 hence big bet? The logic doesn't sound very grounded to me.
@brewdir29 күн бұрын
Bro this is the best video yet my god
@Staatsschuldenlüge4 күн бұрын
i dont get that bet defaults, because GTO would often do the opposite, like on wet boards where both can have range advantage either go big or ck, and on dry boards where we have range advantage go 100% small range bet
@fredbutler436629 күн бұрын
How can I study Ranging your opponents And practice How can I practice the 30 second drills
@agent00jesus4112 күн бұрын
9:55 why can't they be capped? Or can't they be kept on the flop but now on that turn no longer? Because the flop situation is no other then the one where you have the straight with two spades and say opponent is capped. In both cases he called, so where is the difference?
@wesleykorisky8600Ай бұрын
How do you apply all these defaults to multi way pots?
@IsaiJuradoАй бұрын
Love this video, there are similar themes in all of your videos which speaks to how much you believe in what you are teaching. Quick question, I have noticed you don’t mention much about poker math or pot odds etc. is there a reason for that? I feel like there are a lot of poker coaches on KZbin who touch on that subject I was wondering if you could speak to that. Or maybe I missed a video where go over that, idk let me know. Thanks 🙏
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
thanks! i never really think about pot odds or math while playing. don’t think it really comes into play when playing deep stack cash. it’s important when calling off your stack when playing short in a tournament or when playing limit. otherwise, who cares. plus i’m bad at math.
@IsaiJuradoАй бұрын
@@hungryhorsepoker AWWWEEESSOOOOOOOOOMEEE!!!! All the validation I needed!!! 😂 Obviously you results speak for themselves and enhance the narrative you have created on this channel so I’m all ears 👂 ♣️❤️♠️♦️
@gkb1973Ай бұрын
I’m a full time player and curious about your bankroll thoughts for a full time player. This past year life has dealt me a few bad beats. Everything from critically sick dogs that spent a few nights in the hospital to car repairs. All this cost my bankroll about $25k. As a result I moved down to 1/2 live. I’m earning around $50/hr at 1/2 but was earning $75/hr at 2/5. I currently have around $10k. When should I start taking shots at 2/5 again?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
i can’t answer this question, no one can except you. what is your life roll. how much do you spend a month. how many months life expenses do you have saved up. once you have these answered, play around with a variance calculator and look back thru and find your biggest downswings.
@elboroomer-yk1fiАй бұрын
Inspired. Thank you.
@NealJaworski20 күн бұрын
This video might have been my favorite so far (which is saying a lot)
@LearnMathwithMrJerry15 күн бұрын
Thanks for the content. For the sections on Defatuls: I am wondering on a dry board, why would AK overbet the flop?Wouldn't that force our opponents with weaker hands to fold?
@LQReinАй бұрын
Great video. Thank you for this! Can you talk about playing OOP in a heads up pot on the turn when the flop goes check check? Does V checking back the flop really indicate a weaker range, especially if we were the PFR? I feel like leading the turn can sometimes get us into trouble. Is checking turn better and seeing what V does expecting V won’t delay any value they have longer than the turn and getting a bet size read for when they stab?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
as far as when they x back flop when we are pfr - it indicates a very weak range when board is wet and dynamic. not neccessarily AS much when board is dry and static, but still relatively weak. have talked about how to play a few turns when flop goes xx in previous videos!
@IvanS-n5f29 күн бұрын
Great video btw. Any chance you can compare nl with plo at low stakes and give tips for plo?
@UnderGrinder_NL2UPАй бұрын
Your best video, impressive.
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@fransfermont619329 күн бұрын
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@Tyler-pq4xsАй бұрын
I see the immersion course is not for beginners. Do you plan on doing any beginners courses? Thanks for the content!
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
we don’t, we want to focus on one thing and do it really really well. use these videos and techniques to improve, and come to us once you’re ready!
@Tyler-pq4xsАй бұрын
@@hungryhorsepoker sounds like a plan!
@jrhawk0032Ай бұрын
So your thoughts on a part time player will a full time job, just play $1/2 with $300 to $500 to learn and keep playing when I have the money from either winnings and/or job disposable income?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
as long as the buy ins are over 100bb and the rake isn’t absurd
@jrhawk0032Ай бұрын
@hungryhorsepoker the game I have been playing has no rake, it's just an annual membership for $100 plus tipping dealers. They let you play 3 times before having to join.
@nocnykochanekmichaapola3679Күн бұрын
Is 4x from the btn your standart open? If yes, why?
@john-ms9scАй бұрын
It's extremely funny because I searched up tournament poker in your video.This one was the third one.
@DavidBoutinАй бұрын
Amazing video, so much to take in. Quick question: if one wanted to drill ranging and default actions for low limit live poker, would you advise practicing it at microstakes online? Do you think people are making similar mistakes in those two scenarios or do you think online is so different we might be doing ourselves a disservice to try to pratice this way? TIA
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
practice off the table, not while playing. use a shot clock once it gets easier and easier.
@DavidBoutinАй бұрын
@ sorry to pester but where would I get the data to practice with? Is there like a database of poker hands we can access to be sure we’re accurately learning?
@stephennowlin2272Ай бұрын
How do you study ranging drills?
@carvajam29 күн бұрын
Min 5:23 I’m assuming you’re also using ott an overbet 150 size some frequency here to stay balanced? Great video.
@ridingsbald342925 күн бұрын
Can someone explain the purpose of the overbets on dry boards in position? Why is the assumption that villain will be flatting an overbet with a weak hand? Aren't you often getting called only by better? Is it just for fold equity and marginal value?
@MrGabryelloАй бұрын
Marc, at low stakes usually you go 3,4 or 5 ways to the flop, could you incorporate into a future vlog how would you play value and bluff hands? That’s what we struggle the most at times. Thanks - great content though 😊
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
x range if multiple players ip, bet the good stuff if not
@yoniker8329 күн бұрын
Marc - What if when I study by myself, I make mistakes such as assigning my opponent the wrong ranges? What if I think they fold top pair to 2x pot while they never fold an underpaid? How do I avoid that? my concern is that if I study wrong stuff, I will become a worse player than I was before putting in the effort.
@hungryhorsepoker29 күн бұрын
great question. i’m going to make a video on this
@yoniker8329 күн бұрын
@@hungryhorsepoker love you. I did watch the 4 steps guide to become poker crusher, which outlines everything else but this specific point.
@Aleksandr_TRI15 күн бұрын
"for example being miserable" ahahaha nailed it
@ilya9715Ай бұрын
Great video! Question I have been meaning to ask, what would you estimate your VPIP rate is in these low stakes games, and what VPIP would you recommend?
@hungryhorsepokerАй бұрын
my honest advice - the best poker players ask further questions when they have a question, rather than searching for a quick solution. the players who never improve search for answers. further questions i may ask: - is the table tight or loose? - who is in the blinds? are they fish or regs? - how deep are we? - what is my postflop edge over the players behind me (if any)? - am i likely to get 3bet? - is the pot likely to go multiway?
@UnderGrinder_NL2UPАй бұрын
@@hungryhorsepoker another drop of gold here. tks.
@chen48226 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for your investment, What is the best way to practice ranges of players I am playing against? Is there an app?
@MaryArnold-y6c26 күн бұрын
I'm favored,$20k every week! I can now give back to the locals in my community and also support God's work and the church.God bless America.. if you're willing to stop I will help you
@luminrabbit948829 күн бұрын
Phenomenal Marc!!
@RemyLB15 күн бұрын
How do I practice range drills off the felt , like I’m assuming need a game simulator of some sort ? Like what software simulates live players ?