Reading Hands Online – Online Poker Tells

Posted by Thomas Kearns 15 November, 2009

When information concerning an opponent’s hand is revealed by body language this is called “a tell” or “tells”. It is something you should learn to keep an eye out for, it’s a challenge and keeps you from fidgeting as well. It also may decide the outcome of game to your favor like nothing else. Systematic observation may yield invaluable insight and earn you cash. Watch for your opponent tossing their chips vigorously in the bank, licking their dry lips, glancing aside, or scratching behind the ear during a live game. To the uninitiated it may seem more like black magic than technique but many professionals rely heavily upon it.

Things look differently online however. At first glance all that represents a player may be a blank, a photograph (not necessarily of the player) or an image of anything else. So is “reading” even possible online?

The first thing to realize is that your own hand is likewise readable online, even if it’s Homer Simpson with a hand of pink glazed doughnuts that you have uploaded as the online image of yourself. Online tells are primarily the speed with which a player makes his bets. The most basic available way to bet, raise, call, or pass in an online game is by clicking the appropriate button when it is the player’s turn. The other possibility is to mark the box of the action beforehand (bet/raise, etc), so that when it is your turn, the move is made instantly and automatically.

Online “pondering” may mean a weak hand: when a player takes a long time to “think” and then says “check”, they are probably trying to convince you they have good cards when they don’t in reality. It’s as if they were considering investing a significant sum. Actually, they hope you will check as well, so they can have the next card for free. When a person really intends a “check/raise”, they will normally say check after a natural pause and then make a raise equal to the last bet. A bet after prolonged pondering implies strength: making an aggressive bet, the player suggests weakness by “wavering” for a while, enticing you to “call.”

Many of those who make immediate bets or raises are likely to have a strong hand. Deliberate aggressiveness may suggest weakness, but in many cases the situation is the reverse: the player hopes that you will be bullied into believing that he would never have raised so “rashly” if he really had worthwhile cards. It’s a trick of “reverse psychology,” a show usually meant to intimidate you into an unnecessary call.

Some players use the “check/raise” button to play what is probably a very strong hand with deceptive gradualness. When what seems like a hurried check, enticing you to make an aggressive move, is followed by a raise, beware: the check was likely a trap and the opponent’s hand is probably much stronger than you thought it was!

These mere tips may give you some idea of how to observe your online opponent’s habits and mannerisms. Take the time to observe players carefully, they probably betray other more individualized tells, especially those with whom you have been playing for a while. Some players may also try to make it impossible to guess their hands by deliberately timing their response or by persistently taking equal time to respond in all cases. For you to learn to do the same may be a good idea.

The author has played poker full time since 2005 and makes the majority of his income from online poker. He currently plays poker online and gets RakeBack at Aced Poker.

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