![]() ![]() ![]() You could also manually type in AdKs on our row… Click OK and the hand is automatically entered on our line. In this situation we can start by entering our hole cards, so we click the hand button and enter AdKs. Say we play aggressive with Ace King and open-raise preflop, a short stack player goes all-in, and it folds back to us. Let’s start by doing a basic calculation to highlight the process. We can enter a random range by clicking the button with two dice, clear a hand/range out with the red X, or use the green carrot to choose from a preset of ranges based upon the action of a particular villain. We can click the button that looks like 2 stacked cards enter specific hole cards such as our own. We can click the button that looks like a stack of cards to input a range. We can enter cards and ranges a bunch of different ways. On their respective line we can input a range of hands, or exact hole cards, and on the right we can see their equity. To start, let’s look at the Equilab interface and understand what’s going on.Īlong the left we have different positions that represent players. We won’t have the time to use this tool in real-time…but with enough off-table practice you will develop an intuition. We can use this equity to make better plays both preflop and postflop, so knowing how to calculate our equities away from the table is very beneficial. Essentially we use equity calculators to figure out equity against our opponent’s actual hand, or the range of hands they likely have. Thus the probability at least one of them holds a K is 0.36.Ī more accurate result would require using the initial ranges and running a Monte Carlo simulation which assigns CO and BTN a specific hand drawn randomly from that range for 10,000 iterations or so.If you’ve never used a poker equity calculator this may seem a bit daunting…but with some practice using this tool becomes a piece of cake. To find out if at least one of them holds a K, we calculate the probability that neither of them holds a K We have to ignore a second order effect here which is that the specific combo that CO holds impacts the combos BTN can hold, but to a first order approximation it’s reasonable to also assign BTN a 0.20 probability of holding a K. So the probability the CO holds a K is 32/159 = 0.20. Easier is to use JJ-22,AQs-A2s,KTs+,QTs+,JTs,AQo-AJo,KJo+,QJo and let Equilab handle the card removal. If you plug that into Equilab, you’ll get the correct range with removal. JJ-22, KJs-KTs, JTs, AdQd, AsQs, AcQc, KdQd, KsQs, KcQc, AdJd, AsJs, AcJc, QdJd, QsJs, QcJc, AdTd, AsTs, AcTc, QdTd, QsTs, QcTc, Ad9d, As9s, Ac9c, Ad8d, As8s, Ac8c, Ad7d, As7s, Ac7c, Ad6d, As6s, Ac6c, Ad5d, As5s, Ac5c, Ad4d, As4s, Ac4c, Ad3d, As3s, Ac3c, Ad2d, As2s, Ac2c, KJo, AdQs, AdQc, AsQd, AsQc, AcQd, AcQs, AdJh, AdJs, AdJc, AsJd, AsJh, AsJc, AcJd, AcJh, AcJs, KdQs, KdQc, KhQd, KhQs, KhQc, KsQd, KsQc, KcQd, KcQs, QdJh, QdJs, QdJc, QsJd, QsJh, QsJc, QcJd, QcJh, QcJs So I played around in Equilab and got the following: Those ranges are a bit of a mess because of your blockers and the fact the ranges are beheaded (premiums chopped off since your opponents called rather than 3-bet). For simplicity we’ll give them identical calling ranges. Let’s suppose you open from EP with AhQh and both CO and BTN call. ![]() You also need to assign yourself a specific hand to properly account for card removal effects. However, you can arrive at an estimate once you’ve assigned such ranges for this specific case. There’s no general solution since it depends, even in the restricted case of a single preflop raise and two calls, on the ranges played by your opponents. If you find any inaccuracies or find any cool results, let me know in the comments below! We also have another tool called the Fold Equity Calculator which is useful when trying to figure out how often villain needs to fold for your shoves to be +EV. You can use this calculator to solve the EV of calls, shoves, and more. Notice your call is expected to earn you $350 in the long run. Sounds like a great call to me! You think villain is bluffing half the time and beats your hand half the time.If you call and lose, you are out $500.If you call and win, you make $1200 (the $700 pot + his $500 bet).Your opponent shoves for $500 and you are deciding if you want to call. Let’s break it down: Here is a quick example of how you could use this calculator: Put another way, multiply what a win is worth by how often you expect to win and the subtract the multiple of what a loss costs you and how often you expect to lose. The basic formula is simple: EV = (W%*$W) – (L%*$L) ![]()
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