Texas Hold'em Knowledge Hub

#Junk hand

Poker content related to “Junk hand” · 8 items

Strategy

Complete Strategy Guide for Starting Hand T7o: Preflop Ranges and Postflop Play by Position

T7o is one of the weakest offsuit hands in poker and should usually be folded. However, position, opponents, and stack depth can affect its playability. This article details preflop range suggestions for T7o by position and how to handle common postflop scenarios, helping you make correct decisions in marginal situations.

Starting Hand T6o Complete Strategy Guide: Why It's Almost Always a Fold

T6o (ten-six offsuit) is one of the weakest starting hands in Texas Hold'em. This article provides a detailed analysis of its preflop ranges by position, postflop play, and the rare exploitative scenarios where it can be played, helping players avoid losing chips with this marginal hand.

Starting Hand J7o Complete Strategy Guide: Preflop Ranges and Postflop Play by Position

J7o is one of the weakest offsuit connectors in Texas Hold'em and should usually be folded outright. This guide analyzes whether J7o is playable from each position preflop, as well as its limited postflop play only in very specific situations (e.g., checking from the big blind or when short-stacked), helping players avoid losing chips with garbage hands.

Starting Hand J3o: A Textbook for Folding Preflop and Letting Go Postflop

J3o is one of the worst starting hands in Texas Hold'em. This article explains from each position's preflop range and postflop play, detailing why it is almost always folded, and how to play in rare special cases. Suitable for beginners to establish a tight-aggressive style foundation.

Starting Hand Q4o Complete Strategy Guide: Preflop Ranges by Position and Postflop Play

Q4o (offsuit Queen and 4) is a typical junk hand, but can sometimes be used as a blind steal in specific positions. This article details preflop decisions (fold/raise/call) by position, and postflop principles when hitting made hands or draws, to help you maximize value or control losses in rare situations.

Starting Hand 94o Complete Strategy Guide: Preflop Ranges and Postflop Play

94o (offsuit 9 and 4) is one of the weakest starting hands in Texas Hold'em. This article explains why this hand should be folded in almost all situations and analyzes the rare possible exceptions, helping players avoid losing chips with junk hands.

85o Complete Strategy Guide: Preflop Ranges by Position and Postflop Play

85o is one of the worst starting hands in Texas Hold'em and should typically be folded preflop. This article details preflop range selection for each position, along with key postflop play points when hitting special hands, helping players identify fold and value scenarios.

Starting Hand 84o Complete Strategy Guide: When to Play the Worst Hand?

84o (8 and 4 offsuit) is often considered one of the worst starting hands in Texas Hold'em. This article provides a detailed analysis of its preflop range by position, postflop play, and the rare special scenarios where it can be played, helping players avoid common traps and only consider entering the pot under specific conditions.