u/FunnyEducator5329

I built a mobile poker training app and I’m looking for final beta testers before launch
▲ 0 r/poker

I built a mobile poker training app and I’m looking for final beta testers before launch

Hey everyone,

A few months ago I posted on Reddit looking for beta testers for a mobile poker training app I’ve been building for almost a year (LeakSeek Poker), and the feedback honestly helped a ton.

Since then, the app evolved quite a bit:

  • much better explanations/feedback
  • better progression tracking (ELO-style)
  • more solver-backed spots and drills
  • improved practice flow overall

We’re now about 2 weeks away from release, and before launching publicly I’m looking for a final wave of beta testers to help us:

  • catch remaining bugs
  • identify confusing spots/screens
  • improve onboarding
  • stress test the app with volume

The core idea is still the same:
short practice sessions focused on real poker decisions, with instant feedback and explanations after every action.

The goal is less “memorize charts” and more:
“understand why a decision wins or loses EV”.

Trainer

Leaks tracking

human-written explanations

This beta is completely free.
In exchange for feedback/testing, you’ll get free access to the app before release.

I’m especially interested in feedback from players who actively try to improve their game - whatever your skill level is.

If you’re interested, comment here or DM me and I’ll send access over.

Brutal honesty is genuinely appreciated - I’d rather hear what sucks now than after launch 😄

Thanks !

reddit.com
u/FunnyEducator5329 — 4 days ago

Hi guys,
I believe ICM is one of the most misunderstood concepts in poker theory, and I personally struggle to get a clear sense of how much it should influence your decisions as you get deep into tournaments.

Right now, my approach is pretty dumb: as I get closer to the bubble, I avoid playing against stacks that cover mine, even to the point of folding pretty high up my range, just to stay out of difficult spots.

How do you guys approach ICM?

reddit.com
u/FunnyEducator5329 — 11 days ago

More often than not, GTO strategies are insanely hard to apply correctly. Like this BvB flop spot

https://preview.redd.it/0rx780axa3yg1.png?width=1179&format=png&auto=webp&s=fd3cece0314dc8edd94bea9595755635dc300a14

Trying to memorize that is just dumb. IMO you need to drill spots until you get a "feel" for it.
A bit like when you learn how to drive, at first you consciously process everything, but once you have thousands of hours of practice, it becomes completely automatic.

How do you guys approach learning these mixed strats ?

reddit.com
u/FunnyEducator5329 — 16 days ago
▲ 2 r/poker

Hey guys,

Just wanted to share something I realized about my river plays. I was just consistently under-bluffing them, and I think many players at my stake (low/mid stakes) also do.

Typical spot :

A6s Hero (BB) vs AJs Villain (HJ), 50bb deep

This is a 3bet pot, 17.7bb in the middle

Check check down to the river.

Turns out checking again on that runout is a big blunder: losing almost 2bbs for 1 hand (leaking 200bb/100 if done consistently) !

https://preview.redd.it/zsvd0pnc4wxg1.png?width=363&format=png&auto=webp&s=3f2e8bb6c402bc83a57c2cd534afe45b217f8fbf

What also surprised me is that shoving 42bb, a 2.4X overbet is actually way better than just checking again...
Villain just ends up folding a ton of better hands.

https://preview.redd.it/ek96y7lk4wxg1.png?width=363&format=png&auto=webp&s=19983bf4ead37f76af8c008c851f51b0cb2d2761

villain's range

I kinda knew that I was overall playing too conservative with river bluffs with air, but I didn't realize I was bleeding so much EV not playing these more aggressively.

Curious if you guys were aware of these plays being so much EV-

reddit.com
u/FunnyEducator5329 — 17 days ago