Study Report

Board Texture Atlas

Study common flop families and connect board texture to range advantage, c-bet frequency, and sizing discipline.

This page is education-only. It does not provide real-money betting advice, gambling services, or platform referrals.

Board Texture Atlas

A simplified study report for common flop families. It teaches pattern recognition, not solver output.

TextureBaseline ReadSizing BiasBeginner Risk
High-card dry boardThe preflop raiser often has range advantage and can use frequent small bets.Choose size by range shape, board texture, and target hands.Only betting when holding a king.
Low connected wet boardThe big blind connects with more pairs, two pairs, straights, and draws. C-bet frequency should drop.Choose size by range shape, board texture, and target hands.Auto-c-betting because Hero raised preflop.
Paired high-card boardThe raiser can pressure many pocket pairs with small bets, but must protect checking range too.Choose size by range shape, board texture, and target hands.Thinking nobody has an ace and betting every hand too large.
Broadway connected boardBoth ranges can hold strong top pairs, straights, two pairs, and high-equity draws. Sizing must be more selective.Choose size by range shape, board texture, and target hands.Treating top pair as automatically safe.
A-high dry boardThe raiser often has many strong Ax and can small-bet frequently.Small size often applies enough pressure.Betting only when holding an ace.
K-high dry boardThe raiser often owns high-card density and can use small range pressure.Small range bets are common teaching baseline.Checking every missed broadway.
Q/J high connected boardBoth ranges connect with top pair, two pair, straights, and strong draws.Use more selective sizing and fewer automatic bets.Treating one pair as locked value.
Paired low boardRaiser can pressure, but defender has more natural trips than on high-card boards.Small bets and protected checks both matter.Thinking paired means nobody has anything.
Monotone boardRanges compress because one suit controls many continues and blockers matter.Smaller, more cautious sizes are easier to manage.Ignoring suit blockers.
Two-tone dry boardA high-card advantage remains, but flush draws add more continues.Small-to-medium sizes target worse Ax and draws.Using rainbow-board logic with no draw adjustment.
Broadway dry boardRaiser has strong high-card density, but both players can hold top-pair classes.Small or medium bets need clear targets.Treating every king as equal.
Low disconnected boardRaiser has overcards, defender has many pairs and small-board connects.Small bets can deny equity but should not be automatic.Assuming two overcards always mean pressure.
High-card dry board

K72 rainbow

Range: The preflop raiser often has range advantage and can use frequent small bets.

Nut advantage: Compare which player has more sets, two pair, straights, flushes, or top-kicker value.

Baseline: The preflop raiser often has range advantage and can use frequent small bets.

Calling-station adjust: Reduce weak bluffs and value bet hands that worse holdings can call.

Beginner trap: Only betting when holding a king.

Training prompt: Ask who owns more strong Kx, overpairs, and high-card pressure.

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Low connected wet board

876 two-tone

Range: The big blind connects with more pairs, two pairs, straights, and draws. C-bet frequency should drop.

Nut advantage: Compare which player has more sets, two pair, straights, flushes, or top-kicker value.

Baseline: The big blind connects with more pairs, two pairs, straights, and draws. C-bet frequency should drop.

Calling-station adjust: Reduce weak bluffs and value bet hands that worse holdings can call.

Beginner trap: Auto-c-betting because Hero raised preflop.

Training prompt: Ask who owns more nutted and high-equity continues.

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Paired high-card board

AA5 rainbow

Range: The raiser can pressure many pocket pairs with small bets, but must protect checking range too.

Nut advantage: Compare which player has more sets, two pair, straights, flushes, or top-kicker value.

Baseline: The raiser can pressure many pocket pairs with small bets, but must protect checking range too.

Calling-station adjust: Reduce weak bluffs and value bet hands that worse holdings can call.

Beginner trap: Thinking nobody has an ace and betting every hand too large.

Training prompt: Ask how many Ax each range keeps and what worse hands continue.

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Broadway connected board

QJT two-tone

Range: Both ranges can hold strong top pairs, straights, two pairs, and high-equity draws. Sizing must be more selective.

Nut advantage: Compare which player has more sets, two pair, straights, flushes, or top-kicker value.

Baseline: Both ranges can hold strong top pairs, straights, two pairs, and high-equity draws. Sizing must be more selective.

Calling-station adjust: Reduce weak bluffs and value bet hands that worse holdings can call.

Beginner trap: Treating top pair as automatically safe.

Training prompt: Ask which turns are good for barreling and which complete too many draws.

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A-high dry board

A72 rainbow

Range: The raiser often has many strong Ax and can small-bet frequently.

Nut advantage: Strong Ax and sets are distributed by preflop ranges.

Baseline: The raiser often has many strong Ax and can small-bet frequently.

Calling-station adjust: Value bet Ax more; bluff less against callers.

Beginner trap: Betting only when holding an ace.

Training prompt: Name worse Ax that call before choosing size.

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K-high dry board

K72 rainbow

Range: The raiser often owns high-card density and can use small range pressure.

Nut advantage: Defender has sets but fewer strong Kx.

Baseline: The raiser often owns high-card density and can use small range pressure.

Calling-station adjust: Remove weak air versus sticky callers.

Beginner trap: Checking every missed broadway.

Training prompt: Compare QJs and KQ on the same board.

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Q/J high connected board

QJT two-tone

Range: Both ranges connect with top pair, two pair, straights, and strong draws.

Nut advantage: Nut advantage is shared and turn cards shift quickly.

Baseline: Both ranges connect with top pair, two pair, straights, and strong draws.

Calling-station adjust: Value bet clearly; avoid weak bluffs into callers.

Beginner trap: Treating one pair as locked value.

Training prompt: List which turn cards complete too much.

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Paired low board

772 rainbow

Range: Raiser can pressure, but defender has more natural trips than on high-card boards.

Nut advantage: Trips are important even when rare.

Baseline: Raiser can pressure, but defender has more natural trips than on high-card boards.

Calling-station adjust: Value small pairs cautiously versus stations.

Beginner trap: Thinking paired means nobody has anything.

Training prompt: What hands continue to a small bet?

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Monotone board

K83 monotone

Range: Ranges compress because one suit controls many continues and blockers matter.

Nut advantage: Nut flush ownership depends on suited preflop combos.

Baseline: Ranges compress because one suit controls many continues and blockers matter.

Calling-station adjust: Value worse pairs carefully; avoid big pure bluffs.

Beginner trap: Ignoring suit blockers.

Training prompt: Does Hero hold the key suit?

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Two-tone dry board

A72 two-tone

Range: A high-card advantage remains, but flush draws add more continues.

Nut advantage: Strong Ax and nut-flush draws shape future streets.

Baseline: A high-card advantage remains, but flush draws add more continues.

Calling-station adjust: Charge draws and weak Ax, but keep sizes callable.

Beginner trap: Using rainbow-board logic with no draw adjustment.

Training prompt: Which turns are bad for a thin value hand?

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Broadway dry board

KQ4 rainbow

Range: Raiser has strong high-card density, but both players can hold top-pair classes.

Nut advantage: Two-pair and top-pair kicker quality matter.

Baseline: Raiser has strong high-card density, but both players can hold top-pair classes.

Calling-station adjust: Value stronger Kx; avoid thin bets too large.

Beginner trap: Treating every king as equal.

Training prompt: Which worse hands call KJ here?

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Low disconnected board

942 rainbow

Range: Raiser has overcards, defender has many pairs and small-board connects.

Nut advantage: Sets sit more naturally in defender range.

Baseline: Raiser has overcards, defender has many pairs and small-board connects.

Calling-station adjust: Reduce air versus pair-curious callers.

Beginner trap: Assuming two overcards always mean pressure.

Training prompt: Which range has more pairs?

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FAQ

Is this copied from a solver database?

No. It is an original educational summary of common board-texture patterns.

Should I memorize every board?

No. Use the atlas to learn patterns and ask better review questions.

Is this gambling advice?

No. It is strategy education for offline study.

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