Perfect Pot Limit

Documentation


Quick Start

  • Choose a game, situation (RFI, Facing RFI, Facing 3b) and stack size.

  • Input a four card omaha hand with a hotkey in a format like AQJTa with highest card first and lowest last.

  • Don't forget the hotkey character at the end! Basic options are 'a' for any suit, 'd' for double suit, or 's' for single suit. More hotkey information below!

- What's included with premium?
PLO and PLO 8-or-Better Solutions for various stack sizes
RFI w/ BTN, CO, HJ, LJ
v2b w/ BBvBTN, BBvUTG, BTNvCO, BTNvUTG
 (IP and OOP Facing Two Bets from Tight and Loose ranges)
v3b w/ BTNvSB3, UTGvSB3, COvBTN3, UTGvBTN3
 (IP and OOP Facing Three Bets from Tight and Loose ranges)

- Why these?
 Omaha is an often subjective game filled with variables. We aim to give a strong overview while encouraging and allowing critical thinking.
 These solutions provide more than enough information to be an extremely efficient omaha player in the vast majority of game types.

- How much does it cost?
PPL is currently offering an introductory price of a mere $20/month. Early subscribers will be granted this legacy price that will never increase, if you're reading this message that's you!

- Why buy?
 PPL is an extremely efficient and robust study app. It's also optimized for mobile. It can offer solutions from anywhere and is a market leader in price, format and speed.
 PPL shines where other online tools struggle. Easy comparisons and adjustment of variables quickly answer questions about the true playability and value of hands across many common situations.
 Sometimes cheap simply means opportunity. If you play Omaha more than a day or two a month for any stake or, like me, you always wanted to play Omaha variants; but were afraid the knowledge/skill gap was too high this is the product for you. You're getting the money back, and likely many times over.

- On the fence?
 Don't be. You're allowed to not be a fish in PLO. You're allowed to buy high value training that helps you study efficiently. You're allowed to easily know when you blundered and blunder less. You're allowed to take an easy step toward being an Omaha crusher. You're allowed to sign up for an easy app that builds an edge in the game of the future today.

Overview

Perfect Pot Limit is a powerful, one-of-a-kind tool for preflop analysis in Pot-Limited Omaha aimed at taking your PLO game to the next level.
 PLO is a complex game with 16,432 strategically unique preflop starting hands. As of late 2023-early 2024 much of the PLO Cash and Tournament landscape remains dominated by games where developing a masterful intuition of preflop decision making provides a significant, often outright winning edge, along with the foundation for avoiding many significant postflop blunders. PPL is an intuitive and visually based learning tool designed specificially with beginning to midstakes PLO players in mind to develop that very intuition.
 Although PPL is designed to raise the bar of play of any player who has been priced out of expensive online training, or intimidated by the trial-by-fire nature of today's live games; with it's depth of information and a presentation unlike anything on the market, anyone can gain valuable insight into improving their PLO game with PPL.


How It Works

Users can input preflop hands in one of two ways:

***All Inputs must be in the format Highest card to Lowest card!***


1) The traditional eight character long form. For example 'AcAdJcTd'

 Inputs in this manner will output statistics for a single hand with the user's specific suits.
  • Column headers specify positions. Individual cells state the input hand's EV in Big Blinds from that position.
  • For readability the cells are color coded based on playability.
  •   Green cells: A hand with EV +.1BB or Higher (a strong hand playable under most conditions)
      White cells: A hand with EV +.1BB to -.1BB (a candidate hand subject to situational playability)
      Red cells: A hand with EV -.1BB or Lower (a weak hand normally not playble under any condition)
  • Users will note this method being extremely useful in rapid development of intuition regarding the positional value of specific hands. While many mediums offered the ability to compile this information. EVs have never been publicly laid out in such an accessible manner.


2) Perfect Pot Limit's five character form with hotkeys. For example 'AAJTs'

 Inputs in this manner will output statistics for one to many hand with various suit combinations based on hotkey input.


Available hotkeys are as follows:
  • 'd' for Double Suited   (i.e. A♣ A♦ J♣ T♦)
  • 's' for Single Suited   (i.e. A♣ A♦ J♣ T♥)
  • 't' or 'p' for Tri Suited   (i.e. A♣ A♦ J♣ T♣)
  • 'm' for Mono Suited   (i.e. A♣ K♣ J♣ T♣)
  • 'r' for Rainbow Suit   (i.e. A♣ K♦ J♥ T♠)
  • Finally 'a' returning all results of any suit configuation for the hand
  • Users can now explore the variability of specific suits and hand structures. Specifically this presentation allows easy visualization of how particular suits and hand ranks retain or lose EV based on position in ways previously only top performing PLO players were able to fully understand.


Where to Start?

 It's a deep ocean and the potential for learning is practically endless. As a general rule of thumb the 'a' Hotkey is one of PPL's proudest features. In particular the 'a' feature is great at exploring and defining thresholds for PLO starting hands. Identifying thresholds is one of the first impactful resources on the road to developing great heuristics and intuition. With that said here's some inputs users new to PPL may find interesting...

Primer 'a' Statements:
  • 6543a - Are low four card rundowns actually always playable at all stacksizes and from all positions?
  • KQJ9a - What is the value of high rundowns across various suits?
  • QQ96a - How good are middle end Queens with various suits?
  • 7722a - How good is the worst double pair from each position?
  • AA72a - How good are the worst Aces?
  • KK72a - and what about the worst Kings?
  • JT95a - What's the value of a sometimes playable looking three card rundown?
  • KJ87a - What about a semi-disconnected fringe two hold'em type hand?
  • QT76a - How valuable are bunched but disconnected multi hold'em hands?
  • AKT5a - How valuable is AK across various suits, and how valuable are three broadway type hands?