P PLO Pot-limit Omaha training
Free to use Instant feedback No login Local study tool

Redraw and blocker map

See what your hand can still turn into on the next card.

Enter four hole cards and a flop. The tool names the made hand, the strongest redraw, the board texture, and the biggest blocker pressure so you can decide whether to build, continue, or slow the pot down.

Spot map Waiting for a clean hand
A s K s Q d T s 9 s 2 c REDRAW MAP Made hand, draw path, blocker lane The best PLO hands keep multiple ways to improve while hiding their blockers well.
Made hand Enter cards to see the current holding.
Draw path The strongest redraw appears here.
Board texture Board pressure changes with every flop shape.
Next step A free study page appears here once the spot is ready.

Interactive tool

Read the redraw map before the hand gets expensive.

Use standard card codes like As, Ks, Td, or 7c. The analyzer looks at your current made hand, the best draw path, and the blockers you hold against the board.

Card entry and presets

Hole cards

Enter four distinct cards. Example: As, Ks, Qd, Jd.

Flop cards

Paste the three flop cards. The analyzer reads board texture, pair pressure, and flush pressure together.

Effective stack

Stack depth changes how much redraw value you can realize.

Quick examples

Start with a common redraw shape and inspect how the answer changes.

Enter four hole cards and three flop cards to activate the redraw map.

Live read

Enter a hand and flop to reveal the redraw map.

The tool will explain the made hand, the best draw path, and the next free page that fits the spot.

Spot idle

Add clean cards to see the map.

Made hand --
Draw path --
Blockers --
Stack fit --

Enter a full hand to see whether the redraws can support the stack depth.

Why this matters

Redraw-heavy hands can keep fighting on later streets, but only when the board and stack support the plan.

Next best page Hand coach

Open the hand coach when you want a deeper explanation of why the spot plays the way it does.

Useful clue No data yet

The most important blocker or redraw note appears here.

Common shapes

Three redraw patterns that come up often in PLO review.

These notes help you recognize when a hand is drawing hard, when it is already strong, and when the board blocks your best plan.

Wrap plus flush draw Connected suited hands can keep more nut paths alive on turn cards, especially when the stack is deep enough to realize the redraw value.
Top set on a clean board Strong made hands want simpler decisions. Use the evaluator or hand coach to compare how much redraw value you really still hold.
Paired flop with blockers Paired boards shift the pressure toward boats and top-kicker value. The blocker lane matters more when the board is already condensed.
Thin air When the hand has little made value and no real redraw, the next study step is usually a board texture read or a range check.

Study notes

Keep the next step obvious.

The best review flow is simple: identify the made hand, isolate the redraw, and compare that answer against the board texture or the preflop shape.