GTO Academy · Intermediate
What Is MDF in Poker?
Minimum defense frequency is a theory baseline, not a beginner shield for bad calls.
MDF describes how often a range must defend so the opponent cannot profitably bluff any two cards.
It assumes the opponent has a reasonable bluffing frequency.
Against passive players who rarely bluff the river, exploitative folding can be much better than defending a theory number.
MDF, or minimum defense frequency, is a theory baseline that asks how often a range must continue so an opponent cannot profitably bluff any two cards with a given bet size.
The formula is useful as a pressure checkpoint, but it assumes the opponent has enough bluffs. If a passive player under-bluffs a river overbet, defending the MDF number can become an expensive mistake.
MDF applies to ranges, not just your favorite hand. You defend by choosing hands with blockers, equity, showdown value, or future playability, while folding hands that look pretty but perform poorly.
Use MDF as a warning light: if you fold everything, you may be exploitable. Then use opponent type to decide whether that exploit actually matters in this pool or spot.
Reg Chen points at a formula and calls river with bottom pair. Pro Lin underlines the assumption: 'This only helps if villain actually bluffs enough.'
Table Example
Facing a pot-sized river bet, MDF says a range cannot fold too much versus a balanced opponent. Against a passive player who rarely bluffs, folding extra bluff-catchers can be the better exploit.
Study-to-Practice Prescription
| Step | What to do next |
|---|---|
| Study | Treat MDF as a range-level warning light, not a hero-call command. |
| Practice | Run river decision drills against different player types. |
| Review | Compare balanced defense with exploit folds versus passive lines. |
Concept Map
Larger bets require lower defense frequency but higher-quality continues.
MDF applies to the range, not one emotional hero call.
The concept assumes villain can bluff enough.
Population under-bluffing can justify folding more.
GTO Baseline vs Exploit Adjustment
Baseline: Defend enough quality hands to avoid auto-profit bluffs.
Exploit: Choose hands with blockers and showdown value.
Baseline: Theory defense may be too loose.
Exploit: Fold more one-pair bluff-catchers.
Baseline: MDF may be too tight.
Exploit: Call more bluff-catchers by price and blockers.
Common Mistakes
- Calling weak bluff-catchers because a formula exists.
- Applying MDF against opponents who rarely bluff.
- Forgetting that MDF is range-level, not hand-level permission.
Training Loop
- Identify bet size and required defense idea.
- Build a range-level continue list.
- Remove poor blockers and low-realization hands.
- Adjust to villain's actual bluff frequency.
When is it reasonable to fold more than MDF on the river?
When the opponent profile and line are clearly value-heavy, especially from passive players who rarely take large bluff lines.
Train This Concept
Focus on thin value, blocker bluffs, overbets, bluff-catchers, block bets, and river check-raises.
Replay spots connected to recent scores below 70. Stored only in this browser.
Adjust versus calling stations, nits, maniacs, and regulars after naming the baseline.
Next Steps
Three Rules to Remember
- MDF is a baseline.
- Opponent frequency matters.
- Do not call just because a formula exists.
FAQ
Who is this What Is MDF in Poker? lesson for?
It is written for intermediate players who want to connect MDF poker with real positions, ranges, and betting decisions.
Should I study GTO or player types first?
Use GTO as a baseline language, then adjust when opponents clearly call too much, fold too much, or bluff too much.
Is this a real-time play tool?
No. This lesson is for offline poker education, not a poker room, casino, or play assistant.