Features How It Works Blog FAQ Get Access

How to review your Pokerrrr2 hands with an AI coach between sessions

Playing more hands won’t make you better. Reviewing the hands you’ve already played will. The single most reliable way to improve is the between-session loop: after you finish playing, you go back over your toughest spots away from the table, find out what you should have done, and drill the mistake until it stops happening. Pokerrrr2 saves all your hands automatically, which makes this completely doable — you just need a process. Here’s how to review your Pokerrrr2 hands with an AI coach, with the client closed, between sessions.

Why Between-Session Review Beats Playing More

When you’re at the table, you make decisions under time pressure with limited information. After the session, with no clock and the result already known, you can look at the same spot calmly, consider the whole range, and learn the principle behind the correct play. That reflection is where skill is built. An AI coach used off-table turns each uncertain hand into a lesson, and a stack of lessons into a noticeably better game — far faster than just grinding more volume.

The framing that matters: this is a study activity. You do it between sessions, with Pokerrrr2 closed. Reviewing your own past hands to learn is exactly what study tools are for; using any assistant during a live game is a different thing entirely and against platform rules. Everything below is the off-table version.

Step 1: Find Your Hands in Pokerrrr2

Pokerrrr2 keeps your history for you. During or after a game, tap the two-hole-cards icon at the top-left of the game window to open your hand history — a scrollable list of your most recent hands. For any hand you get two useful options:

  • Replay plays the hand out on a miniature table, so you can watch the action street by street.
  • Hand Log shows the action in text form — positions, bets, cards and the full sequence.

(There’s also a Share button that posts the hand to club chat, which you don’t need for private study.) The Hand Log is the important one for review, because it gives you the exact details you’ll need to reconstruct the spot.

Step 2: Flag the Right Hands

Don’t try to review everything — that’s how people burn out and quit. Review the hands that actually teach you something:

  • Spots where you felt unsure — the call you weren’t confident about, the river where you didn’t know whether to bet.
  • Big pots, win or lose, because the EV impact is largest.
  • Recurring situations you face often, since fixing those compounds across thousands of hands.

Deliberately skip bad beats where you got it all in good and lost. Those aren’t mistakes; they’re variance, and reviewing them teaches nothing. The goal is to find decisions you can improve, not outcomes you couldn’t control.

Step 3: Capture the Spot

Because Pokerrrr2 is a club app, it doesn’t export clean, solver-ready hand-history files the way a regulated desktop room does — so your review is semi-manual, and that’s fine. Open the Hand Log for a flagged hand and note the details that define the spot:

  • Your position and the opener’s position
  • Effective stack sizes (in big blinds)
  • The preflop action and sizing
  • The board, and the bet sizes on each street
  • What you did, and where the decision felt hard

A quick screenshot or a line in a notes file is enough. You’re capturing the spot so you can rebuild it accurately when the app is closed.

Step 4: Reconstruct It in Your AI Coach

Now, between sessions with Pokerrrr2 shut, recreate that spot in your AI coach (or solver). Input the position, stacks, action and board, and let the coach show you the recommended line — and, just as importantly, the reasoning. Ask the questions the hand raised: should this be a bet or a check? A call or a fold? What’s the right sizing, and why? An exploit-aware coach can also show you how the line should shift against the loose, recreational tendencies common in club games — useful context for the soft Pokerrrr2 fields. The point isn’t to memorize one answer; it’s to understand the principle so you reproduce it yourself next time.

Step 5: Find the Pattern, Not the One-Off

One misplayed hand is noise. The same mistake across several hands is a leak — and leaks are what actually cost you money. As you review, look for repetition: are you consistently calling too wide out of position? Folding the big blind too much? Missing thin value on the river? When you spot a recurring error, you’ve found something worth fixing, which is far more valuable than relitigating a single hand.

Step 6: Drill It Until It’s Automatic

Once you’ve identified a leak, rehearse the corrected spot until the right action is second nature. Use your coach’s drill or trainer mode to repeat that situation, or simply walk through variations of it yourself. The aim is to move the correct decision from “I had to think about it” to “I just know” — so that next session, at the table and entirely from your own memory, you play it right without help.

Build a Simple Weekly Routine

Consistency beats intensity. A workable rhythm:

  • After each session: flag two or three hands in the Pokerrrr2 history while they’re fresh.
  • Once or twice a week: sit down with the app closed, reconstruct your flagged hands in the coach, and review them.
  • Identify one leak from that batch to focus on.
  • Drill that one leak over the week, then re-check next session whether it’s closing.

Fifteen focused minutes a couple of times a week will outperform hours of unfocused play.

The One Rule

Keep all of this strictly off-table. Pokerrrr2 closed, study tools open — and when you sit down to play, study tools closed, your own judgment in charge. Reviewing your own saved hands to learn is the legitimate, productive use of an AI coach; real-time help during a live game is prohibited on the platform and, just as relevantly, it short-circuits the only thing that makes you better. The edge you keep is the one you’ve internalized.

Conclusion

Pokerrrr2 hands itself to between-session study: every hand is saved, the Hand Log gives you the details, and an AI coach turns those details into lessons. The loop is simple — flag the hands you were unsure about, reconstruct the spot with the app closed, learn the correct line and the reasoning, find the recurring leak, and drill it until it’s automatic. Do that consistently and you’ll bring a sharper game to every session, built entirely on your own understanding. Study with the client closed; play with the tools closed. That’s how the improvement compounds.

FAQ

Tudo que você precisa saber antes de começar.

Can I review my Pokerrrr2 hands inside the app?
+
Yes. Tap the two-hole-cards icon at the top-left of the game window to open your hand history — a scrollable list of recent hands. Each hand offers a Replay (a miniature table playthrough) and a Hand Log (the action in text), and all hands are saved automatically so you can review past games anytime.

Does Pokerrrr2 export hand histories to solvers or trackers?
+
Not in a clean, standard format — as a club app it doesn’t write solver-ready hand-history files the way regulated desktop rooms do. So review is semi-manual: read the in-app Hand Log to capture the spot’s details, then reconstruct that hand in your AI coach or solver away from the table.

How do I use an AI coach to review a Pokerrrr2 hand?
+
Between sessions with Pokerrrr2 closed, recreate the spot in the coach — position, stack sizes, action and board from the Hand Log — and let it show the recommended line and the reasoning behind it. Focus on understanding the principle so you can reproduce the correct play yourself, rather than memorizing a single answer.

Which hands should I review?
+
Review the spots where you felt unsure, the big pots, and situations you face often, since fixing recurring spots compounds. Skip bad beats where you got it in good and lost — those are variance, not mistakes, and reviewing them teaches nothing.

Is it allowed to use an AI coach with Pokerrrr2?
+
For off-table study, yes — reviewing your own saved hands between sessions with the app closed is exactly what study tools are for. Using any assistant during live play is a different matter and is against platform rules, so keep review and play strictly separate.

How often should I review my hands?
+
A light, consistent routine works best: flag a couple of hands after each session while they’re fresh, then once or twice a week sit down with the app closed to reconstruct and review them. Pick one leak to focus on each week and drill it. Fifteen focused minutes a few times a week beats hours of unfocused play.