Flop texture
Which texture best fits this flop?
Pick the dominant board class. The next street will reveal the shift before you answer again.
Start the drill to load a random board.
Board runout drill
A new PLO board loads every round. Classify the flop texture, then name the biggest shift on the turn and river. Your accuracy, streak, best run, and review queue are saved in this browser only.
Interactive drill
The drill reveals the board street by street so you can practice one decision at a time. Flops ask for the texture class. Turn and river ask for the dominant change from the previous street.
Flop texture
Pick the dominant board class. The next street will reveal the shift before you answer again.
Start the drill to load a random board.
What the drill trains
Use the flop to set the board class, the turn to spot the first meaningful branch, and the river to close the story. That is the same pattern you will use when a real PLO board gets messy fast.
Flop
Wet, connected, paired, monotone, and dry flops are the base layer. If you get that right quickly, the later streets become much easier to read.
Turn
Turn cards usually care about one thing first: pairing pressure, flush pressure, or straight pressure. That change often matters more than the raw rank.
River
The river tells you whether the board stayed stable or swung into a new branch. That final read is where a lot of PLO mistakes start to show up.