these charts are referred to as “implementable gto charts ... · instructions these charts are...
TRANSCRIPT
InstructionsThese charts are referred to as “Implementable GTO Charts” because they are as close to GTO opening ranges as you can get without splitting the way you play each hand. For example, there are many instances where the GTO strategy suggests playing a specific hand some portion of the time, perhaps 33%. In the Implementable GTO Charts, if there are three hands, such as Q-6o, Q-5o and Q-4o, that each get played 33% of the time, only one is played, making the strategy much easier to implement while only sacrificing a tiny bit of equity.
These charts assume the action is folded to you unless otherwise stated. If there are raisers or limpers in front of you, the situation changes and the charts no longer apply. These charts assume your opponents play a GTO strategy, which will rarely be the case. If your opponents play too tightly or too loosely, you should make significant adjustments to take advantage of their mistakes.
With a 15BB stack when you raise and face an all-in, the GTO strategy is usually to call with between 41% and 53% of your range. With a 25BB stack when you raise and facer an all-in, the GTO strategy is to call with between 27% and 34% of your range. Call a bit wider when your range is tighter and when the opponent’s range is wider. Call a bit tighter when your range is wider the opponent’s range is tighter.
For the Facing RFI ranges, the charts assume a min-raise is used.
Raise First In (RFI)UTG UTG+2UTG+1 Lojack
Hijack ButtonCutoff Small Blind
Facing RFI: In PositionUTG+1 vs UTG RFI HJ vs LJ RFIHJ vs UTG RFI
CO vs LJ RFI
CO vs UTG RFI
BTN vs CO RFIBTN vs LJ RFIBTN vs UTG RFI
Facing RFI: Out of PositionSB vs UTG RFI SB vs CO RFISB vs LJ RFI
BB vs UTG RFI
SB vs BTN RFI
BB vs BTN RFIBB vs CO RFIBB vs LJ RFI
Blind vs BlindSB RFI SB limp vs BB 3x raise
BB vs SB limp
SB limp vs BB all in
BB vs SB limp/all-inBB vs SB all in