Poker solvers aren't the end all be all in poker. Reminds me of the zone defense in the NBA
Why are so many poker players acting like the poker solvers is the absolute best way to play? You have to bet your gutshot straight in position at a 16% frequency on this turn card and blah blah. The poker players that I have played against that are strong and competent poker players are over bluffing now due to these solvers. They have no clue about their opponents tendencies or style of play. The solver says do this so that is the way? I really don't understand this at all. This solver strategy isn't going to be efficient vs a player like me or Chris Moorman, Jason Koon etc in poker tournaments. Certain player types of players are more focused on the solvers than than actual players they are playing and the table dynamics. This type of player has to go all in on the river on a scare card on the river and such so I just adjust and call light. The solver won't help vs a poker genius, this is silly now. How does this make any sense? I been playing poker for 20 years now this doesn't make any sense to me. You are supposed to play your opponent and adjust to their play, no solver will help you with that. I have learned how to bluff more watching people who do follow the solvers and that has helped me. This is rant because some poke snob will say I am wrong and that solvers are correct and I am a moron but am I?
I have been a moron for stating my opinion. i been posting on the forums for a while and have been playing poker for a long while as well. You guys always have to threaten me with your words yet in real life you won't do anything to me. Soft is what you are and fragile, you guys are all talk on here with no substance.
I have been a moron for stating my opinion. i been posting on the forums for a while and have been playing poker for a long while as well. You guys always have to threaten me with your words yet in real life you won't do anything to me. Soft is what you are and fragile, you guys are all talk on here with no substance.
Whether or not a human can beat a solver at poker is not a matter of opinion. You might as well say magnus could beat stock fish or a man really can jump over the moon
Solvers are flawed.
They have a place though.
My biggest fear with computers it there speed. I feel like I can compete vs
a computer on 1 or 2 tables. But trying to playing many tables, I'm too slow.
Computers can play a certain level of poker probably on 20, 50 maybe even 100 tables.
Of course they will only get better too.
I feel players should be required to talk sometime online so that we know for sure
its not a bot
Guys, the main objective of using a solver is to understand his logic and nothing more.
By viewing what he does you can expand your thought proccess beyond. Its not about copying the solver.
Solvers are flawed.
They have a place though.
My biggest fear with computers it there speed. I feel like I can compete vs
a computer on 1 or 2 tables. But trying to playing many tables, I'm too slow.
Computers can play a certain level of poker probably on 20, 50 maybe even 100 tables.
Of course they will only get better too.
I feel players should be required to talk sometime online so that we know for sure
its not a bot
If you can play against a solver and be competitive you're literally the greatest poker player to ever live
There’s only one way to test this.
Place GTO players vs non GTO players. After a big hand sample, see the results.
You’ll need to find honest people that don’t use GTO though, and two sets of players from the same stakes.
There are no "GTO players" - so this challenge isn't possible to do. There are only players who try to emulate GTO.
The only way this could work would be if the "non GTO players" only used preflop and postflop bet sizings from known solutions - then the "GTO players" could try to use GTO Wizard solutions while playing or an RTA, since there is no other way they'd be playing "GTO".
It's simply impossible for a human to know even 10% of whatever the actual GTO solution is. There are simply too many boards, runouts, and bet sizings ... and when you change a variable such as a bet size or stack size the entire solution changes.
This is also why catching bots is difficult - there are many solutions that are very close or the same in EV and it's not really a great idea for bot detection to directly compare against known "GTO" solutions when using one isn't necessary to have basically the same EV - and also you can't do a direct comparison anyway unless the all of the bet sizes match up exactly to a known solution. To be fair if sizes are close to known solutions - the strategies from those solutions are still likely very good but not GTO.
I think there is a lot of fundamental misunderstanding of solvers in this thread.
i think its funny when someone claims a solver couldn't beat their donk infested 1-2 or similar stakes game because its gonna get confused by the wild play or whatever nonsense. Even a non node locked solver would crush due to all the mistakes being made. It would passively exploit the hell out of the game. A properly nodelocked solver would crush even harder. Not sure why people like OP believe that if someone could actually sneak GTO+ or pio or wizard to the table it wouldn't send every other player to brokesville if they played long enough
i think its funny when someone claims a solver couldn't beat their donk infested 1-2 or similar stakes game because its gonna get confused by the wild play or whatever nonsense. Even a non node locked solver would crush due to all the mistakes being made. It would passively exploit the hell out of the game. A properly nodelocked solver would crush even harder. Not sure why people like OP believe that if someone could actually sneak GTO+ or pio or wizard to the table it wouldn't send every other
Publicly available solutions actually are really far from live 1-2 play.
In live games people often open to 6-10x ... 8 people limp and someone isos to 20x ... GTO Wizard solutions open to like 2-2.5x ... and doesn't even have preformulated solves vs limpers ... so assuming you could even find the spot you're in quickly, it would be kind of hard to use GTO Wizard since none of the bet sizes or ranges are going to match what your opponents are doing.
Yeah, if a solver could solve on the fly and with inputs that are even close for whatever spot you're in - you'd crush. I'm not saying solvers are outputting the wrong solution - and I'm not saying what people do in live games is good ... because it's definitely really bad - just saying it's a solution for completely different situations compared to what you commonly face in live play.
kevmode are you the guy who wrote about a stabbing in the poker room but more of the post had to do with your choice of wearing cargo shorts instead of the stabbing or am i confusing you with someone else?
i think its funny when someone claims a solver couldn't beat their donk infested 1-2 or similar stakes game because its gonna get confused by the wild play or whatever nonsense. Even a non node locked solver would crush due to all the mistakes being made. It would passively exploit the hell out of the game. A properly nodelocked solver would crush even harder. Not sure why people like OP believe that if someone could actually sneak GTO+ or pio or wizard to the table it wouldn't send every other
You are misrepresenting what people are claiming.
I think a solver can easily beat a donk infested $1/$2 game. No doubt.
I also think a player with a solid understanding of poker fundamentals will crush the game far more than a solver that isn't focused on beating a silly mess.
Yes, solvers will do fine. Eventually they will break the others at the table. An exploitative player will do it faster.
You are misrepresenting what people are claiming.
I think a solver can easily beat a donk infested $1/$2 game. No doubt.
I also think a player with a solid understanding of poker fundamentals will crush the game far more than a solver that isn't focused on beating a silly mess.
Yes, solvers will do fine. Eventually they will break the others at the table. An exploitative player will do it faster.
Maybe you believe the solver can win but op clearly believes a solver wouldn't be efficient against themselves or Chris Moorman I take not efficient to mean the solver would lose. Which is of course non sense. If the solver is just playing gto it crushes. If it is properly nodelocked even more so, only way solver loses is if you force it to play a horrible strategy
There are no "GTO players" - so this challenge isn't possible to do. There are only players who try to emulate GTO.
The only way this could work would be if the "non GTO players" only used preflop and postflop bet sizings from known solutions - then the "GTO players" could try to use GTO Wizard solutions while playing or an RTA, since there is no other way they'd be playing "GTO".
That's effectively what we mean here. We don't mean players who play like computers (impossible), but those who emulate the known solver outputs in a wide array of spots.
That's effectively what we mean here. We don't mean players who play like computers (impossible), but those who emulate the known solver outputs in a wide array of spots.
My point is that even emulating GTO at live games really isn’t possible. Too many people are opening big, have limping ranges which affect their open ranges, and take many other actions which create spots that either aren’t available in published solutions or aren’t similar enough to published solutions to be that useful.
If you have solved and are familiar with the actual spot you’re in (such as iso’ing a limper, flatting a 5x open etc.) and the ranges for your solve are close, then that would be different - but it’s not GTO at that point either - just an optimal response to a suboptimal play.
Recs are doing so much weird stuff you will never be able to solve or come close to memorizing what the solver did in every spot … but having a good grasp of math & theory can get you closer to playing optimally in unfamiliar situations.
Using a BTN flatting range for a 2x open size from GTO Wizard wouldn’t be great (could even be -EV) if someone is opening 5x, depending on what their range is.
Yes, solvers will do fine. Eventually they will break the others at the table. An exploitative player will do it faster.
This. There isn't a single game in the world which you would want to play in where you would ever want to play "GTO" as opposed to the old "look at what they are doing and exploit their mistakes" as has been understood in all games since the dawn of time
I think it's hilarious how every player at my table just outs themselves as GTO wizard users by using the exact same sizing schemes as it does....
My point is that even emulating GTO at live games really isn’t possible. Too many people are opening big, have limping ranges which affect their open ranges, and take many other actions which create spots that either aren’t available in published solutions or aren’t similar enough to published solutions to be that useful.
If you have solved and are familiar with the actual spot you’re in (such as iso’ing a limper, flatting a 5x open etc.) and the ranges for your solv
Yes so you would need to use a native solver and run sims where people do stuff like open 5x. Sure you can never emulate the solver but you can still learn generalities and heuristics. Remember though op is actually claiming they can beat a solver. That's the only issue I have. If you wanna say you can beat a bunch of bad players for a higher rate than a GTO strat fine, Not sure if I agree but it's at least a reasonable statement. The claim that a solver can't help you make adjustments is also false. Solvers are quite good at making adjustments. You just need to give it good info. Which admittedly may be difficult when dealing with a bunch of yahoo's playing half the deck and most every flop being multiway
Getting back to opening sizes a little common sense goes a long ways, if someone opens 5x UTG, the first adjustment would be to fold all your 0ev calls and even a lot of your hands that are marginally +ev
If you have solved and are familiar with the actual spot you’re in (such as iso’ing a limper, flatting a 5x open etc.) and the ranges for your solve are close, then that would be different - but it’s not GTO at that point either - just an optimal response to a suboptimal play.
This statement shows that you fundamentally do not understand what GTO -- game theory optimal -- means.
GTO play is fundamentally exploitative, sometimes massively so.
For example, if we somehow know that the villain who otherwise plays well is bluffing on the river a small percentage less often than the Nash equilibrium frequency, the GTO play is to Stop. Bluffcatching. Completely. The response to a tiny deviation from equilibrium can be a massive one.
Solvers find solutions by having the simulated players exploit each other as much as they possibly can, until ultimately the play converges to the Nash equilibrium, where there is no more edge to be gotten by either player trying to exploit the other.
Do not confuse GTO play with play at Nash equilibrium.
This statement shows that you fundamentally do not understand what GTO -- game theory optimal -- means.
GTO play is fundamentally exploitative, sometimes massively so.
For example, if we somehow know that the villain who otherwise plays well is bluffing on the river a small percentage less often than the Nash equilibrium frequency, the GTO play is to Stop. Bluffcatching. Completely. The response to a tiny deviation from equilibrium can be a massive one.
Solvers find solutions by having the simulate
The only real point I'm trying to make in this thread is that published solutions won't help much in live games ... because most of the time before the action gets around to you, someone has already done something that deviates from published solutions in a big way, sometimes in multiple big ways ... enough that you won't be able to use a solution to effectively play against their flawed strategy using any published solution.
However if you have solved the spot and are close to what they're doing ... then that would of course be very effective.
Maybe you believe the solver can win but op clearly believes a solver wouldn't be efficient against themselves or Chris Moorman I take not efficient to mean the solver would lose. Which is of course non sense. If the solver is just playing gto it crushes. If it is properly nodelocked even more so, only way solver loses is if you force it to play a horrible strategy
I make zero claim to what the OP believes.
I also know that "nodelocked" in the crapshoot games that are $1/$2 or $1/$3 is a meaningless term.
Yes, a GTO player wi win in these strange games just because it won't do something stupid, but I also contend that that if you say you are playing GTO, yet are including exploitative elements 99% of the time are you really playing GTO or are you just playing "poker"?
This brings up an interesting question I've had for a while. We know in an equilibrium that both strategies and ranges are known perfectly. So what, if any, +ev plays a solver is doing in the equilibrium become pure mistakes because of wrong assumptions about the strategy and ranges used?
For example, let's say a solver is assuming that AK/QQ/JJ is pure 4bet in a spot, but the player actually flats those hands a high % of the time and even KK and AK some % of the time, making their postflop range much more uncapped. I fail to see how this couldn't lead to a solver making pure mistakes and even losing money overall depending on the intensity of false assumptions, but maybe I'm wrong?
This brings up an interesting question I've had for a while. We know in an equilibrium that both strategies and ranges are known perfectly. So what, if any, +ev plays a solver is doing in the equilibrium become pure mistakes because of wrong assumptions about the strategy and ranges used?
For example, let's say a solver is assuming that AK/QQ/JJ is pure 4bet in a spot, but the player actually flats those hands a high % of the time and even KK and AK some % of the time, making their postflop range
Depends on how you define "pure mistake"
If pure mistakes means that the solver's action is -EV, the answer is none. A bot playing GTO at equilibrium will always make at worst neutral EV decisions no matter the opponent.
But it wont always take the highest EV line against a specific opponent. So you could consider that to be a mistake if your goal is EV maximization.