Thank you! I’ve been crushing poker for the past two years (mainly Omaha cash) and when I say that I lean heavily on exploitative play a lot of poker players think it’s reckless. But, playing with loose players who play less than optimal pre-flop and post-flop is what I’m looking for in a game. If I played a tight pre-flop range I would lose on an incredible amount of opportunities
@DanRicePoker1Күн бұрын
@@angelokozonis7151 agreed. Good luck and love in your exploitative game. Whatever works, double down on it ☺️💪
@moishesteigmann3 күн бұрын
Great way to frame this. I really appreciate how you laid it out.
@mongoose33353818Күн бұрын
Two comments. First, I play low-stakes recreational poker for the most part, and read and watch videos a lot, trying to improve. This is one of the better videos I've seen, as it's mostly about playing the player, which has always made sense to me. Second, I'm subscribing---but PLEASE take the background music out of your videos. It's harder to understand what you're saying when it gets muddled by the music. Your accent (I'm midwestern American) is easy to understand, but not when it's jumbled up with the music. It's like a web page with text where the background is a pattern that makes the text hard to distinguish from the pattern.
@DanRicePoker1Күн бұрын
@@mongoose33353818 no problem brother we ALWAYS appreciate the feedback. Love to Midwest America ☺️❤️🇬🇧🇺🇸
@J-Bags3 күн бұрын
Great advice. I’ve always thought along this line but I never really hear it said.
@J-Bags3 күн бұрын
The notes I give players are pretty garbage though. Shows I have a way to go.
@DanRicePoker13 күн бұрын
@@J-Bags thank you ☺️. It’s 100% normal though don’t worry, but hopefully the video should help. If you have any video requests of anything we can make that might help you out, please just say ❤️. Happy Christmas
@tarlkudrick11745 күн бұрын
My coach agrees with you and I'll be interested in comparing your exploitative ranges vs. his. One request: A lot of your advice seems to assume you'll be playing heads up, while in my games many hands feature 4 or 5 players seeing the flop, even if I raise from first position. Against too many callers, you have to approach post-flop situations very differently than if you're heads up against one player who has a specific weakness. When a hand feels like you're playing a bomb pot, you really just have to lose less when you miss the flop than other players will, and win more when you hit it to make up for all the times you raise pre and then have to fold. Or is there a better approach that I'm missing?
@DanRicePoker15 күн бұрын
@@tarlkudrick1174, I’m always happy to discuss exploits. ☺️💪 and if you or your coach wants to, I’m happy to ❤️. Me and the pros I work with do that a lot. As always, any educational advice is easiest applied to 1 vs 1, and multivariable applications ( >2 players in pot) comes next. The same principles will always hold though, it’s just the practical ways you exploit differ in 3+ player spots. Firstly, you can raise bigger pre to reduce pot sizes. Charge players to call wrongly more if they do it too much (simple adjustments, I know). The solver would do this if it knew players were calling too wide. Personally I like x/raise spots multiway for value mainly and vs players that bet too much. Very difficult to explain through message, so apologies for the general advice. More than happy to make a vid ❤️ Glglglgl and love, Dan
@Apocalypse_Promotions3 күн бұрын
New subscriber. Thank you for this.
@DanRicePoker13 күн бұрын
@@Apocalypse_Promotions no problem brother. ☺️❤️
@kevinkolev707819 күн бұрын
I really liked your video on ranking rhe sites, maybe a vid expanding on game selection, I feel that's the least talked about part of poker possibly equally or more important than actual poker skill, rightly so the sharks don't wanna give away the secret fish pools 😅
@DanRicePoker116 күн бұрын
Yeah 100%. We have that coming don't worry
@kevinkolev707819 күн бұрын
Nice, someone speaking some actual facts for a change, very good points you made, I'm already tagging players as fish plus a note e.g. folds to big flop Cbet, or gives calling timing tells, bluffs river half pot, or what type of board it was if they did something weird, Nice content man keep going!
@DanRicePoker116 күн бұрын
Yeah perfect. It helps save a LOT of energy over longer sessions, whioch helps you scale up # tables too. Also means you're more prepared for what lines make the most $ before you exploit players. As always, glglglgl
@enijize12344 күн бұрын
Fold to big flop cbet is a trash note. People fold to small flop cbet as well. Big whoop
@CamBZ-pl6md4 күн бұрын
Insane content bro
@DanRicePoker14 күн бұрын
@@CamBZ-pl6md Thank you brother. We are only going to make constantly better stuff, all of next year. Have a lovely Christmas. ❤️
@michaelheaton45263 сағат бұрын
So play tighter than the charts out of position and loser in position?
@DanRicePoker12 сағат бұрын
@@michaelheaton4526 it’s more complexed than that. Analyse every situation by opponent weaknesses in the BB, BU, SB, CO in that order of importance. You always deviate from charts is the point of the video. How much, why and where IS the skill of poker. Glglglgl ❤️
@michaelheaton45262 сағат бұрын
@ Id like a follow up video with more explanation than ‘find your opponents weekness’ and ‘write a note’.
@royalflush8173Күн бұрын
How are your ranges differnt from anyone else?
@DanRicePoker1Күн бұрын
@@royalflush8173 they are free 👀. There is no difference in ANY Nash equilibrium ranges. The point of any is that there aren’t any better (they’re optimal)
@eric528020 сағат бұрын
there is no better advice than find worse poker players than you and play them as often as possible.
@prakashmahtani63454 күн бұрын
Hi Dan came across your channel only yesterday. Feels like Santa sent me a Christmas gift. Will take on your course. Cheer mate. Great content
@DanRicePoker14 күн бұрын
@@prakashmahtani6345 Aww thanks brother ☺️. Any questions or if I can help at all, hit me up. Have a lovely and merry Christmas ❤️