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tx.io

GTO poker trainer

Drill the poker decisions that keep costing EV.

Pick a spot, make the line decision, see the EV feedback, then queue the missed pattern for the next review rep.

Decision-point drills Instant EV feedback Leak review loops

1. Pick

Spot family

Preflop, c-bet, barrel, bluff-catch, and river call reps stay separated.

2. Decide

Line and sizing

Choose the action before the explanation so the feedback has a real target.

3. Review

Leak cue

Use the EV delta, range state, and next rep cue to keep the session narrow.

Today's queue

BTN c-bet: dry ace-high boards

Run the same board class before moving to paired or connected flops.

Review tag

Missed pressure spot

The next rep starts from the leak, not from a random spot picker.

Practice loop

Make one decision, then make the next rep smarter.

The best tx.io sessions are narrow. Choose the leak, make the line decision, read the EV and range cue, then repeat a close spot before moving on.

01

Pick one leak

Choose the spot family that cost you chips last time: preflop range, c-bet, barrel, blocker, bluff-catcher, or 3-bet defense.

02

Make the decision

Choose the line before reading theory. The rep should feel like a hand, not a paragraph from a strategy article.

03

Read the EV feedback

Compare the EV, solver cue, sizing note, and range state while the mistake is still fresh.

04

Queue the next rep

Repeat the same leak family before mixing topics, so the next session starts with a clear study job.

How the trainer helps

Practice the decision, then review the leak.

The public guides explain the idea; the trainer turns it into reps with EV feedback, solver-line review, and a narrower study queue.

Trainer vs solver

Use a solver to inspect one exact configuration. Use a trainer to make the decision repeatedly, see the EV feedback, and remember the cue next time.

Compare trainer vs solver

Practice, not live-play help

Study before or after play: run spots, review misses, and build the next drill queue. Do not use tx.io for real-time decisions during active hands.

Read use boundary

Leak paths

Route misses into preflop ranges, c-bets, 3-bet defense, blockers, river bluff-catchers, or review mode so the next session has a clear job.

Open practice paths

Decision cards

Open the practice path that matches today's leak.

Each card names the spot, why it deserves a serious study block, and the next rep to run away from active play.

All strategy guides ->
Preflop range trainer Stop guessing which hands belong in the range. Click when your opens, calls, three-bets, and folds are bleeding together. Pick one seat, then review why each hand is pure, mixed, or out. Best next rep: cutoff open, button steal, blind defense. 3-bet defense Separate the calls from the hands that fight back. Click when facing 3-bets feels like chart memory. Compare position, sizing, blockers, stack depth, and which hands can realize equity after calling. Best next rep: defend, four-bet, or fold after opening. C-bet spots Find the flops where betting is not automatic. Click when every flop c-bet looks tempting. Train range advantage, board texture, value targets, and bluff candidates before choosing a size. Best next rep: BTN vs BB on dry, paired, and connected boards. Blockers Know when your cards remove the story villain needs. Click when blocker talk feels abstract. Name the represented range first, then count which value hands, bluffs, calls, or raises your cards block. Best next rep: ace blockers, missed draws, and river raises. Bluff-catchers Make close river calls with a checklist, not a mood. Click when you overfold or pay off too often. Convert the price, count credible bluffs, test the line, and check which blockers matter. Best next rep: call/fold river bets after missed draws. Review mode Turn repeated misses into the next study queue. Click when a session leaves scattered mistakes. Sort misses by range, sizing, blocker, pot-odds, or position so tomorrow starts with the leak that repeats. Best next rep: replay the same leak family before adding topics.

Study before the next session

Read the spot, then drill it.

Strategy hub ->

GTO poker trainer

A good GTO poker trainer gives adults 18+ solver-style poker decisions, immediate feedback, plain-language explanations, and review queues for repeated leaks. It should be used for study and practice, not real-money gambling or live-play assistance.

Read guide

Poker trainer vs solver

A poker solver is the better tool for deep one-spot lookup, bet-size comparison, and exact equilibrium output. A poker trainer is the better tool for repeated decisions, feedback, leak review, and retention. tx.io fits the trainer role for adults 18+: coached GTO poker practice without real-money gambling or live-play assistance.

Read guide

Preflop range trainer

A good preflop range trainer teaches the reason behind each preflop action, not just the chart cell. It should connect opening, calling, three-betting, four-betting, and folding to position, stack depth, rake, blockers, and equity realization, then review recurring leaks so the next practice session is narrower.

Read guide

Flop c-bet trainer

A good flop c-bet trainer teaches adults 18+ to compare range advantage, board texture, value targets, bluff candidates, and sizing before betting. It should separate broad small-bet boards from polarized boards and review automatic c-bet mistakes away from live play.

Read guide

Turn barrel trainer

A good turn barrel trainer teaches adults 18+ to compare range shifts, equity improvement, blockers, fold equity, sizing, and river plans before betting again. It should review over-barreling, under-bluffing, and giving up when the turn card actually improves the betting range.

Read guide

3-bet defense trainer

A good 3-bet defense trainer teaches which hands continue after facing a three-bet, why position changes the defense range, and when blocker hands become four-bet bluffs. It should review repeated leaks such as loose out-of-position calls, missed value four-bets, and overfolding late-position opens.

Read guide

River bluff catching trainer

A good river bluff-catching trainer teaches adults 18+ to convert the bet into a required win rate, identify credible bluffs, compare blockers, and review calls or folds by leak family. It is for study away from live play, not real-time gambling assistance.

Read guide

Blockers practice

Good poker blockers practice asks adults 18+ to name the value range first, count relevant combos, then compare bluff and bluff-catch candidates by what they block or unblock. It should be used for study and review, not during live poker or real-money play.

Read guide

Poker equity trainer

A good poker equity trainer teaches pot odds, required equity, range equity, and equity realization together. It should make players estimate the call threshold, compare hand classes, and review spots where raw equity looked good but future playability was poor.

Read guide

Postflop poker trainer

A postflop poker trainer should drill flop, turn, and river decisions with range interaction, board texture, bet sizing, blockers, pot odds, and review notes. Use it to build study habits, not to assist live play.

Read guide

GTO Wizard alternatives

The best GTO Wizard alternative depends on the need. Choose GTO Wizard for the broadest mature solver library. Choose a poker trainer like tx.io when the need is affordable repeated decisions, plain-language explanations, leak review, and spaced-repetition practice away from live play.

Read guide

Responsible study boundary

A poker study loop, not a poker room.

tx.io pairs trainer reps with public strategy guides and glossary definitions for adults 18+ studying away from live hands. It is not a poker room, casino, payment processor, or real-time assistant for active play.

Practice, not gambling.

tx.io is a poker strategy trainer. It does not process wagers, run games, or promise profit.

Study away from live hands.

Use the trainer and public guides before or after play, not for real-time decisions during a live hand.

Adults only.

The product is for users 18 years or older. For responsible gambling resources, see ncpgambling.org.