Rotation simulator

Practice the decision reset between mixed-game rounds.

Choose a rotation, set the session objective, and rehearse the game-specific decisions that change from round to round.

Interactive practice

Mixed-game rotation practice tool.

Use the generated rounds as a focused session plan: name the game reset, answer the spot, log the leak that needs the next rep, and send the result back to the review queue if needed. The shared trainer mirrors that handoff so the next drill or quiz starts with the same family context and the resume state stays aligned.

Mixed-game rotation simulator

Rotation Simulator for mixed-game study sessions.

Choose a preset rotation, session length, and pressure level. The simulator turns the existing scenario data into game switches, reset prompts, and feedback notes.

Ready to simulate a mixed-game rotation.

Game type filters
Objective templates
Scenario customization
Session scorecard
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Feedback prompt: after the first simulation, write the game switch that felt least automatic.
Feedback log

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Dynamic guide

Run the simulator to get a decision reset guide tied to the selected rotation preset, round count, and objective.

More tools

AI guidance

This simulator is a study aid for decision practice. Confirm the exact house rules, betting limits, and rotation order before using a generated plan in a live game.

Rotation examples

Practice the reset for HORSE, 8-game, split-pot, stud, and draw transitions.

These examples make the simulator easier to use. Each one names the reset you should make before the next hand and links to the page that matches the format.

HORSE

Name the current game, betting structure, and pot objective before the first action. The reset is usually strongest when you identify whether the next round is high-only, split-pot, stud, or draw.

8-game

Separate fixed-limit rounds from no-limit or pot-limit rounds. The reset is to reprice stack depth, commitment, and fold equity before you use the old limit habit.

Split-pot

Shift from one-way value to scoop, freeroll, and quarter-pot thinking. The reset is to ask what wins high, what wins low, and whether the same hand can still pressure both halves.

Stud

Track exposed cards and dead ranks before you act. The reset is to count live improvement cards and compare board stories instead of reading the hand like Hold'em.

Draw

Stop reading boards and start reading draw counts, pat timing, and smoothness. The reset is to decide whether a rough pat should stand, break, or pressure the next draw.