P PLO Pot-limit Omaha training
Free to use Instant feedback Local score tracking

PLO board texture quiz

Classify random flops before the table gets loud.

The quiz throws real PLO board shapes at you and scores the answer immediately. You will see wet, dry, paired, monotone, connected, and low-connected flops, with a short explanation after each attempt and a local streak that stays in this browser.

Texture memory Ready for a random flop
WET T 9 6 Wraps and redraws collide DRY A K 7 Made hands matter more Q Q 4 J paired blocked full house runout MONOTONE Suit ownership PAIRING Board pressure
Wet Connected ranks and suit pressure keep wraps, flush draws, and redraws alive together.
Connected Run-heavy flops stay dynamic even when the board is not yet paired or monotone.
Paired Trips and full houses move to the front fast when a rank repeats on the board.
Monotone When one suit dominates, suit ownership matters more than temporary pair strength.
Dry Spread-out flops lower draw density and make blockers more important than raw equity.

Interactive quiz

Read the board, make the call, then compare the explanation.

Each round shows one random flop. Choose the texture label, get immediate feedback, and use the explanation to lock the pattern into memory. Your accuracy, streak, and missed board types stay local to this browser.

Board to classify

Round 1
Random flop Choose the texture

Choose the board texture that best fits this flop.

Why this fits

Choose first, then compare the board shape and the summary cue.

Answer first, then compare the board shape against the explanation so the read becomes automatic.

The lesson, gallery, and runout simulator are linked after each answer for a quick study loop.

Study notes

The fastest texture read is the one that changes your next decision.

Wet and connected boards reward nut coverage. Dry boards reward blockers and cleaner made hands. Paired boards compress the value tree. Monotone boards force suit ownership into the conversation. Low-connected boards look small, but they still keep the straight grid live.

Wet

Use this label when connected ranks and suit pressure keep wraps, flush draws, and redraws active together.

Dry

Use this label when the flop is spread out and draw density drops, so blockers and made hands matter more.

Paired

Use this label when a rank repeats and trips or full houses start to dominate the value structure.

Monotone

Use this label when one suit owns the flop and suit blockers become the first question.

Connected

Use this label when the ranks run together and straight pressure stays live even without a pair or a suit lock.

Low-connected

Use this label when the board is run-heavy in the smaller ranks and the straight fight stays open across many turns.