Poker TrainerRAISE FIRST IN Β· LEVEL 1

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β€”
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Best streak
PositionHandsAccuracy

Drill filters

Pick a seat to hammer it, or Random to mix. Only seats that can open first-in are shown.
Shown in the table state for context. At Level 1 (opening ranges) the right open is the same whether you're 50 BB or 200 BB β€” stack depth starts changing answers once you're facing raises (set-mining) at later levels.

Glossary

Positions (seats)

UTG
Under the Gun β€” first to act preflop. Earliest, tightest seat.
UTG+1/+2
Seats just after UTG. Still early position.
MP
Middle Position.
HJ
Hijack β€” two seats right of the button (late-ish).
CO
Cutoff β€” one seat right of the button. Late position.
BTN
Button (dealer) β€” acts last postflop. Widest range.
SB
Small Blind β€” posts the small forced bet; out of position.
BB
Big Blind β€” posts the big forced bet; last to act preflop.

Actions & bet types

RFI
Raise First In β€” opening when everyone before you folded. This level's focus.
Iso-raise
Isolation raise β€” raising over limper(s) to play them heads-up.
3-bet
A re-raise of an opening raise (blinds = 1st bet, open = 2nd).
4-bet
A re-raise of a 3-bet.
c-bet
Continuation bet β€” betting the flop after raising preflop.
GTO
Game Theory Optimal β€” the unexploitable baseline. This app trains an exploitative tight-aggressive style instead.

Notation & units

BB
As a unit: Big Blinds, the chip measure (e.g. "100 BB deep", "open to 3 BB").
s
Suited β€” both cards same suit (AKs = Aβ™ Kβ™ ).
o
Offsuit β€” different suits (AKo = Aβ™ Kβ™₯).
T
Ten β€” cards run A K Q J T 9…2.
+
"and better": 77+ = 77…AA; A2s+ = A2s…AKs.

Hand types

Pocket pair
Two cards of the same rank (AA, 77, 22).
Suited connectors
Consecutive same-suit cards (T9s, 54s).
Suited broadways
Two same-suit high cards T–A (KQs, JTs).
Suited ace
An ace with any same-suit card (A5s, A8s).
Set-mining
Calling a raise with a small pair to flop a set (trips). Worth it only ~15–20Γ— the call deep.
Top pair
Pairing the highest card on the board with one of your hole cards.
Overpair
A pocket pair bigger than every board card (e.g. QQ on a J-8-3 flop).
OESD
Open-ended straight draw β€” four to a straight, open both ends (8 outs).
Gutshot
An inside straight draw β€” only one rank completes it (4 outs).
Rule of 2 & 4
Draw equity: outs Γ— 2 (one card) or Γ— 4 (two cards).

Strategy Guide

This trainer teaches one consistent style: exploitative tight-aggressive poker β€” not GTO. The whole method fits in one rule and a few range charts. Learn the rule, memorise the charts, and you'll make the "correct" play this app grades for.

The one rule: raise or fold

Limping is never correct. If a hand is good enough to play, you raise with it; if it isn't, you fold. Calling/limping just to "see a flop" surrenders the initiative and lets weak hands play back at you cheaply. (The only exceptions come later: setting-mining behind limpers, and flatting in position vs a raise β€” both covered below.)

Three ideas drive every decision:

Sizing cheat-sheet

Tuning for a loose amateur table

The charts below are a solid tight-aggressive baseline. Against a table full of calling stations β€” amateurs who limp a lot, call too much and rarely fold β€” make four adjustments:

Level 1 β€” Raise First In (RFI)

It's folded to you. The seat you're in decides how wide you open. Each range below includes everything from the tighter seats above it and adds the hands in green. Notation: s = suited, o = offsuit, + = "and better".

UTG / UTG+1 / UTG+2 β€” early position (tightest)
Pairs: 77+ (77 88 99 TT JJ QQ KK AA)
Suited: AKs AQs AJs KQs
Offsuit: AKo AQo
MP / HJ β€” middle position
Adds pairs: 22–66 (now any pair)
Adds suited: ATs KJs KTs QJs QTs JTs
Adds offsuit: AJo KQo
CO β€” cutoff (late)
Adds suited aces: A2s–A9s (every suited ace)
Adds suited: K9s Q9s J9s + connectors T9s 98s 87s 76s 65s 54s
Adds offsuit: ATo KJo QJo
BTN β€” button (widest)
Adds suited kings: K2s–K8s
Adds suited: Q8s Q7s Q6s J8s T8s 97s 86s 75s 64s 53s 43s
Adds offsuit broadways: KTo QTo JTo
Deliberately NOT opened vs stations: weak offsuit aces (A2o–A9o) and offsuit gappers (K9o T9o 98o) β€” dominated, no fold equity. The suited versions stay in for their implied odds.
SB β€” small blind
Only the BB is left to act, so the SB opens raise-or-fold with the full cutoff range above. (You'll be out of position postflop, so don't go wider than that β€” and never just complete/limp.)
BTN (heads-up) β€” you act first, only the BB behind
Open very wide: any pair, any suited hand, any offsuit with a Ten or better, and small connected offsuit (e.g. 65o, 75o). Fold only disconnected offsuit junk like 92o, 73o.
Example: Aβ™ 5β™  in UTG β†’ fold (A5s isn't in the early range). The same Aβ™ 5β™  on the CO/BTN β†’ raise β€” late position is wide enough to open every suited ace.

Level 2 β€” Iso-raise vs limpers

One or more players just limped (called the big blind). A limp is a weak, capped range β€” so you attack it.

In the Big Blind you've already paid, so you never fold:

Example: Aβ™₯Jβ™₯ (AJs), two limpers, you're on the CO β†’ iso-raise to 6 BB (4 + 2). 5♣5♦ (55), same two limpers β†’ limp behind to set-mine; one limper only β†’ fold (not multiway enough).

Level 3 β€” Facing a raise

Someone has already opened. The bar to continue jumps way up. Adjust to where the raise came from: tighter vs an early raiser (strong range), looser vs a late/steal raiser.

Example: Aβ™ Q♦ (AQo) vs a BTN steal β†’ 3-bet (it's in the late value range). The same AQo vs a UTG raise β†’ fold β€” UTG's range has you dominated.

Level 4 β€” Bet sizing

Here the action is already decided β€” you're raising β€” and you only pick the size. Too small gives opponents a cheap price to draw out; too big risks more than necessary and folds out the worse hands you want to keep in. Use the cheat-sheet at the top: open ~4 BB, iso 4 BB + 1/limper, 3-bet 3Γ— (~12 BB IP) or ~4Γ— (~16 BB OOP) the open, 4-bet ~2.3Γ— the 3-bet (~28 BB).

Level 5 β€” Flop c-bet (postflop)

You raised preflop, one station called, and you're heads-up on the flop in position. This is where the real money is made. One rule covers it:

Bet your made hands and your big draws. Check everything else β€” never bluff a calling station.

Example: Kβ™ Q♦ on Kβ™₯7♣2β™  β†’ bet (top pair, clear value vs a station). 9β™ 8β™  on Aβ™₯4♣2♦ β†’ check β€” no pair, no draw, and a station won't fold to a bluff.

Level 7 β€” Turn play (barrel or give up)

You c-bet the flop and got called. The turn brings a fourth card and you act again, still in position. Now you choose between firing a second barrel and shutting down:

Barrel value and big draws. Check marginal hands. Give up your air.

Level 8 β€” River play (value-bet & bluff-catch)

The last card is out and draws are dead β€” every hand is now made or busted. Two spots:

Value-bet your made hands thin; check back the rest. Facing a bet, bluff-catch by read.

How to drill: set your Level in βš™ Filters to match the chart you're learning, pin a single Position to hammer your weakest seat, and watch the πŸ“Š Stats sheet flag where you're leaking. Tap πŸ“– for any term you don't recognise.