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Pokercruncher for windows6/11/2023 ![]() Thanks for the explanation.Looking for a way to Download PokerCruncher - Advanced - Poker Odds Calculator for Windows 10/8/7 PC? You are in the correct place then. I never understood where the rankings came from. I actually purchased the PokerCruncher for android, PokerCruncher, OddsTeacher and OddsQuizzer for iOS. Wow, thanks a lot for your response! I've been using your apps casually for a few years now and I really like it. The above webpage has descriptions of the 8 orderings. For example 54s has higher value in a general game situation where you're seeing a flop against at least several opponents than in a preflop all-in heads-up situation. This ordering gives a higher ranking to Ax hands, and a lower ranking to suited connector hands, than the PokerStove ordering. For example when deciding if you want to move all-in preflop in a heads-up situation, the Sklansky-Karlson(Chubukov) All-In No-Limit Hold'em Rankings would be the best ordering to use. You'll want to use different orderings for different types of game situations. The Mac-Expert version of PokerCruncher has 8 different hand orderings, listed on this page: This has become a de-facto standard hand ordering and is a good general purpose ordering for many types of game situations. The iPhone, iPad, and Android versions of PokerCruncher have 1 hand ordering, the same as PokerStove's hand ordering, where hands are ranked according to preflop all-in equity vs. I'll comment on just the PokerCruncher part of this post and will leave the rest for others to give input on. Is it necessary to have 80+ different charts of hand ranges that you can follow strictly or just approximately for every possible situation to become a better player? Do you guys do this or know of other good players who actually do this? There is no absolute hand rankings and you just have to come up with your range based on the type of opponents you are facing. Am I wrong in thinking this way? Is there a consensus in the community as the correct ranking of the hands?ġ. There is no one top 10% hand range that is always right. and concluding that there is no clear answer. I used to mess around with PokerCruncher to put hands up agains certain ranges to make rankings and getting new rankings against those new range, etc. Moreover, someone else can have a newer rank against our new range and so on. We want to know how it fares against our opponent's range and given that out opponent plays a certain non random range, we can have a new rank of hands against that range. Also, we're not interested in how our hand fares to a completely random hand. If it's ranked based on equity vs a random hand then why isn't 88 and 77 ranked above AKo? They both have higher equity. This can only be justified putting these hands against a completely random hand in which case 99 has about 72% equity while AKo has about 65%. For example, PokerCruncher ranks 99 over AKo. I don't know exactly how they came up with these rankings but I don't agree with all of them. I think their ranking system is the same as that of Equilab's. I have an app called PokerCruncher that has hand ranges and rankings. I don't completely agree with how the hands are ranked in some books and apps. I play conservativelyĭo good players all have their own 80+ charts and ranges memorized by heart and mostly follow? Is this really necessary to become a better player? I guess I've been playing with a vague range in my mind because I certainly don't have 80 different ranges memorized by heart. I read somewhere that you have to have a clear range you want to play for every situation and not just a vague one. There are 88 more charts for live cash games and 80 more for MTT whatever that is. So there are 8 + 36 + 36 = 80 different preflop charts and that's just for online cash games. Then there are 36 more charts for when you're not first in the pot but someone else raise in front of you (or is this something else? I'm not sure but there are 36 charts). Then, there are RFI vs 3 bet charts in which if you RFI'd in a certain position and someone in a different certain position 3 bet you, what is your raise, call fold range? There are 36 charts for this. ![]() So I just purchased a membership in Doug Polk's Upswing poker and found that there are preflop charts for many different situations.įirst, obviously there are raise first in (RFI) charts for each position so 8 charts there. I'm not sure if this is the right forum to ask this question.
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