Professional Documents
Culture Documents
A Collection of Free Online Poker Learning Resources
A Collection of Free Online Poker Learning Resources
A Collection of Free
Online Poker
Learning Resources
Presented by the UWE Poker Society
1
Brief Introduction
While reading guides and studying the game can never guarantee that you’ll become a good
player in whatever game you’re playing, in poker combining it with simply playing the game
is the best place to start. Many of these resources were designed as standalone guides or
not purposed for education at all, so will often repeat the same concepts. This is a good
thing – reading the basics over and over helps it sink in.
Each resource will be accompanied by a brief note. This may be a description of what it is
and who wrote it, advice on how best to use it or a caution about how not to misinterpret
what it says.
This guide is not exhaustive. There are most likely many more free resources out there
online. This is merely a brief collection of tools that I have personally used to improve my
game, and should be supplemented by resources you find by yourself and what you learn
from playing.
Each resource is listed in its respective section following this order. Beginners appropriate
items first, followed by the rest. Don’t limit yourself to using one at a time – it’s best to be
using multiple resources simultaneously.
Using these resources and learning from them is not a substitute to persistent and regular
play, especially when you’re starting off. Playing the game is the best way to learn, and as
you play you will find outside research more and more helpful.
If you’re brand new to the game, my recommendation is to start by watching the “Nicky
Numbers” videos, and then start reading the Dan Harrington books and “Poker Basic
Course” at PokerSchoolOnline.
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Books
The first poker resource I used, Volume I served as my introduction to the basic rules of the
game and made me realise just how complicated poker strategy could be. Poker strategy
has evolved tremendously since this trilogy came out (2004-2006) and the average player is
now much looser than this book accounts for, but it teaches a solid tight-aggressive playing
style which every beginner to the game should adopt while they find their feet.
This trilogy is very thorough and teaches a lot. It is certainly one of the better books I have
found online for covering a wide range of concepts. However, there are now more modern
and more abbreviated books which say the same thing and much more. Despite this, I still
highly recommend this trilogy as the first place to go.
Use this trilogy (more likely just the first) as a starting place to learn the basics, but be
wary that poker has evolved since it was written. Read if you like lots of depth.
http://dominateonlinepoker.com/wp-content/image/pokerbooks/Dan%20Harrington%20-
%20Harrington%20On%20Holdem%20-%20Volume%201.pdf – Volume I
http://dominateonlinepoker.com/wp-content/image/pokerbooks/Ebook%20-
%20Dan%20Harrington%20-%20Harrington%20On%20Holdem%20-%20Volume%202.pdf –
Volume II
http://qrara.net/~hansu/poker/Harrington%20on%20Hold'em%20-%20Volume%20III%20-
%20Workbook.pdf – Volume III
This book covers many of the same concepts as Harrington, and more, but omits the basic
rules of the game.
The perfect book to start after learning the basics from the Harrington Volume I. Read in
conjunction with the rest of that trilogy.
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http://soulw4x.free.fr/poker/Hold%20em%20Poker%20For%20Advanced%20Players.pdf
A highly focused book, dedicated to detailing Daniel’s “small ball” strategy. It assumes the
reader already has knowledge and experience of the game, and does not cover any of the
basics.
A strategy book, designed to make the reader think about how they play. Take its lessons
and consider how they could be used to better your play.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/78952579/Power-Hold-Em-Strategy-by-Daniel-Negreanu
Gus Hansen takes a unique approach by detailing, as the title of the book suggests, every
hand he played in a high-stakes tournament he won. Guiding the reader through his thought
processes at the time, this book is useful for understanding what you should be thinking
about when at the table. Including every hand helps bring the reality of poker to the reader
as well – many hands are not played, and patience is necessary to wait for the right spots to
risk your chips.
Useful for understanding on-the-go poker thinking combined with hindsight after the
hand was concluded. While this resource could be used by a beginner, the more
experienced the more of it you will understand.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/95059613/Every-Hand-Revealed-by-Gus-Hansen-pdf-
Unknown-Unknown
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Sit ‘n Go Strategy, by Collin Moshman
Despite being designed for “beating one-table poker tournaments”, concepts here can apply
to poker in general. A lot of pointers for general play which can be adapted for any
tournament structure or even in cash games.
While there are useful concepts, be wary of its focus on the one-table Sit ‘n Go structure.
Some concepts carry over to other tournament structures while others do not. To read it,
it’s best to copy and paste each two page image in Paint and rotate it to the correct
orientation. Due to the way it’s been photocopied some of the pages are out of order, but
just follow the page numbers and you’ll find the right places.
http://www.scribd.com/doc/116271036/Collin-Moshman-Sit-n-Go-Strategy
Another poker book written by professional players, this is the most modern out of the
collection here (2011). It accounts for strategies developed very recently, and the priority of
establishing the evolution of the game and respecting the different playing styles is obvious
(seeing as how the first part of the first section is dedicated to talking about it).
http://www.gamblingsystem.biz/books/Bertrand(ElkY)Grosspelier_The_Raiser's_Edge.pdf
5
Online text
PokerStars offers this interactive training course. After creating a PokerStars account you
are allowed to create an account on this website and explore the features.
There’s little more to say here other than this: explore. There are other features I’ll
mention PokerSchoolOnline in the “videos” section later when I introduce another one of
its useful sections.
http://www.pokerschoolonline.com/
Included as appropriate to beginners because it does teach the basics in a quick video here:
http://www.pokerlistings.com/complete-poker-basics-video-series (number 7), this
resource is split into two sections: articles, and “Question of the Day”.
Pokerlistings has an incredibly broad range of articles suitable for different levels of players,
and my advice here is just to explore and read what you think will help you.
The “Question of the Day” is found on the main page by scrolling down. The questions are
designed to test all of your poker skills and simulate action at a table. The answers often
provide useful insight into what you should be thinking about while in a hand, BUT DON’T
TAKE THEIR ANSWERS FOR SCRIPTURE. Hands can be played in different ways, and
sometimes these questions propagate bad habits. I take their lessons with a pinch of salt,
and use their advice on what to think about rather than their specific moves. Pokerlistings
has a question a day going back to 2008, so if you like this method of learning strategy then
there are plenty of examples.
http://www.pokerlistings.com/
6
http://www.pokerlistings.com/poker-question/archive/2014 - “Question of the Day” archive
starting in 2014, select year and week from the side menu.
I’m only including this in the intermediate section because it doesn’t teach the basic rules of
Texas Hold’em. However, once you know the basics this is a good example of a website
containing useful information which becomes easier to understand the more you
understand the game. Relevant sections include: Texas Hold’em, MTT Tournaments, Sit ‘n’
Go, Pokerology, and Poker Heads Up. Each section contains “Beginner”, “Intermediate”, and
“Advanced” sub-sections.
Use in conjunction with books once you understand the rules of the game.
http://uk.888poker.com/poker-strategy
7
Videos
All of these videos are suitable for beginner levels, because they are either designed to
teach beginners or are not designed for teaching the game and can be watched for both
educational and entertainment purposes.
“Nicky Numbers” teaches the game from the beginning, and includes some other features
not in other resources, like tips on poker etiquette.
He teaches a wide variety of things in different videos, so anybody can use these to touch
up on specific areas of their game.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XG5EwUQsboM&list=PLLALQuK1NDrh8fn1zxL3e8i_fjYi
0e_0_&index=40 – Introductory video of the series. Browse the selection of videos.
The European Poker Tour hosts a number of tournaments which then have highlights from
each day cut together and broadcast, starting from day one. Interesting and entertaining to
watch with some commentary about actions from the commentators (James Hartigan and
Joe Stapleton) and sometimes from the players involved in the hands. Often showing the
more interesting hands (i.e. the all-in battles, the brilliant soul reads, and the particularly
well-played pots). This is a good place to start if you’re watching poker on TV for the first
time.
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EPT Live
Full coverage of final tables from EPT tournaments. Useful if you have the patience to watch
every hand, watch the full story behind a tournament final table, which is big stacked and
filled with the best.
WSOP Academy
The World Series of Poker has also released educational videos, which a Youtuber has
collected into his channel. These videos include videos about the game and also videos
about poker tells, all hosted by a variety of professional players (including Phil Hellmuth).
https://www.youtube.com/user/LectiidePoker/videos
There are other poker shows which personally I don’t watch very much of, but that you
should be made aware of as you may prefer to branch out from my EPT-based guide.
Tournaments:
Cash games:
9
PokerSchoolOnline “Poker Bites” (PokerStars)
http://www.pokerschoolonline.com/articles/Poker-Bites-Playing-Big-Pairs
10