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tx.io

Poker strategy guide · 7 min

Poker trainer vs solver

A poker solver is best when you need deep lookup and exact strategy output. A poker trainer is best when you need repeated decisions, mistake review, and a practice loop that turns solver ideas into habits.

Solvers answer one spot deeply

A solver is the right tool when you want to inspect a game tree, compare bet sizes, or study exact equilibrium output for a specific configuration. That depth is powerful, but it can turn into passive browsing if the player does not convert the finding into practice.

Trainers turn study into repetitions

A trainer asks for decisions again and again. The value is not only whether the answer is correct. The value is seeing which mistakes repeat, which lines create EV loss, and which concepts need another rep before they show up at the table.

Use both by job, not by brand

Use a solver when the question is "what does equilibrium prefer here?" Use a trainer when the question is "can I make this decision correctly under pressure?" tx.io belongs in the second job: adult-only strategy practice, not real-money gambling or live-play assistance.

Practice prompts

  • Pick one leak and decide whether you need solver lookup depth or trainer repetitions first.
  • After studying a solver output, write the one cue that should appear in your next trainer session.
  • Review a missed trainer spot and name whether the miss came from range, sizing, blockers, or pot odds.