Adanced study with Piosolver
Posted by tconservani
Posted by
tconservani
posted in
High Stakes
Adanced study with Piosolver
Hi guys, any stduty tips with PIO ? Generate spreadsheets, graphs or notes to remember and fix the learnigs stuffs ? I did some randows work, review hands from tourneys and cash zoom but I didint learn the max I think. Then I try to do a lot of repetitions, like BTN vs BB with big and a little SPR, 50BB stacks, 30, and 20BB effective, same positions and a lot of boards, and again BTN vs CO, UTG vs BTN and so on, note things like cbet flushdraws and backdoors nuts but not backdoors non nuts on flops x y and z, cbet more vs non check raises spots and so on, but still a little to learning! Any method to use ? note docs or excel spreedsheets to learning more ?
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Hey mate!
I guess you can have a spreadsheet to make your work and know what kind of work you have done. Also, in the sheet you can add notes for the main points you dounf out in every sim.
I recomend doing simple sims such as SPR for EPxEP (25, 50, 75bb deep), EPxMP, EPxBU, etc. as well some 3bet pots for a few different boards.
About the sheet, you can use tabs for the preflop spots and then in each one use lines for different board textures and the columns for the stack depth
Hi Pedro !
Ty ! I need to put a lot of work on this, and I'm recreative player, so without any tips matbe I put a lot of work on wrong direction.
And congrat for your video here ! GL
I really like your commitment to understand the game on a theoretical level!
As far as increasing your efficiency of studying is concerned: I think the most effective way to study is to (1) play (2) study hands you doubt (3) play (4) study hands you doubt, ad finitum.
One thing to look out for, and I think a lot of professional poker players can relate to this, is that whatever way you study, there will come a point where you start taking things for granted. If you are an intuitive player, at some point you start to trust your intuition, and that inevitably leads to blind spots. Similarly, spreadsheets are great, but be careful. Poker is a beautiful game, partially because of its complexity, but there may come a point where T97r starts to look like JT8r from your spreadsheet, and you make wrong plays you never even doubt.
Studying using spreadsheets is really effective, and I think Pedro's recommendations as well as your own ideas are great. However, I would encourage you to always keep in mind that studying poker is an ongoing process, and at the risk of saying something cliché: every hand is different, and be sure to continue to study even as you slowly start to go on auto-pilot.
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