This chart details the Hole Cards that we believe you should open with in a 6-max No-Limit Hold ‘Em tournament without antes – such as Match Poker Online’s™ Battle Royale tournament. These provide your Pre-Flop Ranges depending on your position, as explained below.

[If you are looking for our chart for 8-max play, click here]

The positions around a table in a 6-player game, clockwise from the Dealer Button, are:

  1. Button/Dealer (BTN)
  2. Small Blind (SB)
  3. Big Blind (BB)
  4. Under The Gun (UTG)
  5. Middle Position (MP)
  6. Cutoff (CO)

 

Pre-Flop Ranges Chart for 6-Max Play by Match Poker Online

How to interpret our Pre-Flop Ranges Chart:

This chart shows all the possible Hole Cards you could be dealt – ‘s’ for ‘suited’ and ‘o’ for ‘offsuit’.

When you are UTG (i.e. directly to the left of the Big Blind), this chart suggests you should only open (i.e. bet first) with the cards in the Red boxes.

When you are in Middle Position (MP), more hand combinations open up. The chart suggests you can now open with all of the cards in the Orange boxes in addition to the ones in the Red boxes.

In the Cutoff position, even more hand combinations open up. The chart now suggests you can open with all of the cards in the Yellow boxes in addition to the ones in the Orange and Red boxes.

Next you reach the Button, where more options are available to you, adding the green boxes to all of those that were available in the earlier positions.

Then you reach the Small Blind. In this position, the chart suggests you can open with any cards in any of the coloured boxes except for pink.

Finally comes the Big Blind. It would be extremely unusual for you to find yourself in a position where you can open in the Big Blind. This would mean all players before you are calling (limping) or folding, showing extreme weakness. You may then open with any cards in any of the coloured boxes.

Any boxes that are white are those you would usually never open.

Lastly, once you are familiar with this chart and have applied it in practise, you’ll begin to learn how to deviate from these guidelines when the situation calls for it. Click here to learn why position is so important in poker!

Learning to quickly recognise what position you are in and how this translates to what hands you should open with will quickly improve your play. We see nothing wrong with printing this guide out and following it religiously in any Battle Royale matches where 6 players are at each table, as you learn to find your feet in poker. Diligence is key at this stage in your learning.

This will also help ensure that your VEP falls within a reasonable range. Click here to learn what your VEP and PFR are and what they tell you.

Watch your IFMP Rating soar as you learn to follow our Pre-Flop Ranges guide!

*Editor’s Note: We frequently get feedback from players that this chart has led them astray. For example: “I had K3o on the Button and folded, per this chart, and the Flop came out 3-3-K. I could’ve won 3000 chips because three other people played that hand, who I would’ve beaten.”

To this, our response is that we apologise for leading you astray in that hand, but, in the long run, this chart will ensure you end up in front. We explain this in our article on Expected Value – an integral concept for all aspirational poker players.