Tuesday 25 June 2019

Hold'em Strategy and Tips | T8 online casino | Singapore@Malaysia

In general, have some good timing for us bet :

1. When your card is strong enough.
2. When your opponent will probably fold.
3. When your card needs protection.
4. When you are in a favorable position and want a free showdown.
5, in order to better cover your strength. 

Is there anything unclear about this? "Strong enough" is related to a specific opponent. What factors do you need to consider?
> Make more value bets when fighting multiple opponents than when you are singled out. As the number of opponents increases, the demand for "strong enough" will increase. Because as the number of opponents increases, the chances of holding a strong card to make a bad player appear will rise.
> You should make fewer value bets when fighting against your hands. This is obvious - if your opponent is playing tightly, he will not call if there are not many players. If you are called, you will rarely lead.
> You should make fewer value bets against aggressive opponents. Although we believe that aggressive players always want to get involved in the big pot, in fact, most of the players are so radical because they always either bet or fold. If you bet on a crazy player, he is likely to fold and continue to play the next hand. Suppose you check, he is likely to bet on you, this time you can quickly come to a bluff.
> When the board is very noisy, you should make less value bets. You are holding the A7 on the J-7-3-2 mixed flower community card. Which cards can the opponent use to call? It is inevitable that the cards he can call will not make you happy. Assuming the community card is 9-8-7-2 (with two red hearts), you have a greater chance of getting a call from someone chasing a strong hand.
> You should make fewer value bets when you want to keep a small pot. In general, if you have a weak hand, you want to keep a small pK), you usually make mistakes. Before you build the pot, make sure you really want a big pot.ot. Because there are two people's chips involved in the pot, if you only have a top-to-top kick (TPT
> You should make more value bets against the caller (call station). When holding JJ on the Q-9-4-2 flower card face, against a tough and smart opponent, don't make a big pot. However, against a caller, you are far ahead of his range. You should let him suffer from being too loose.
> You should make more value bets when your opponent is likely to chase a draw. If you know that the opponent is the kind of person who never gives up the flush card, use any pair of cards that have two flush cards on the board. But you have to make sure you fold when you show up on the third flush.
> Make a value bet when your card is subtle. If you use the 54S to raise at the muzzle position, the flop is 8-7-6 mixed flowers, fire it! ------No one knows your bottom line, so you are likely to get a weak call.
> You should make more value bets when fighting bad players. A bad player usually doesn't know the value of the card, and he doesn't know when to fold and when he has been defeated. Let them use the money to buy lessons.
In short, value bets not only occur when you are sure that your card is best, but also when your cards can beat your opponent.
Another point: "raising for value" is more difficult than "betting for value" because raising often stops the opponent's actions, either letting them fold (stop throwing money at the pot) or lead They check the call (the pots grow faster than you let them keep firing).

The timing of betting is related to specific opponents and specific public cards.
> Your fold rate will increase when a scare card is issued. Suppose you use 88 in Q-7-4 (with two red hearts) check-call. When K occurs on the turn, you should consider betting, especially against those who don't bet on the draw.
> For discerning players, your fold rate will increase. Although poor players tend to follow too many bets, good players often fold too much, especially at the small bet level. This level of difference is a call station, but "good hands" tend to play weak. Use this rule to force those "good hands" to fold on the turn.
> If you show strong in the early stages of the game, your fold rate is higher. For most players, it's extremely scary to "turn forward, follow the flop and then bet again, and then bet again on the turn, especially for those who "know" the bet. You will often find that some people verify their opponent by observing whether the pre-flop raiser continues to bet on the turn. To deal with this kind of opponent, the "second fire" often has an outrageous fold rate. (Note: Against this opponent, getting a good hand on the turn check often has a very high benefit, because they either try to bluff you on the river, or check-call on the river to "obvious bluff." Just against the kind of players who are not well thought out, raise the front - the flop bet - the check of the turn  - the value of the river bet is also a very potential combination of actions.

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