Wilson Turbo Hold Em 4.0
NOTE: Current Version is 5.0
DELIVERY - Quick. White CD envelope, User Guide
for new product, (not lower-priced
upgrades), install troubleshooting and new feature overview sheet
INSTALLATION - Very simple and easy, a few
mouse clicks and minor entries. More flexibility
in allowing where Start shortcuts are placed would be nice. This
might be an InstallShield limitation. - There is an option during
the InstallShield process that allows you to load the
demos of the other programs that Wilson offers.
INITIAL PRESENTATION - Software flashes pictures
of various card casinos, unless you turn it
off in the Problems area. - Upon opening, the plain green table
felt is displayed in the window, with the pop-up Tips window.
After closing, the versioning information is displayed by itself
on the felt - No Start Game button exists, but Hold Em menu choice
at the top right is intuitive enough.
INITIAL CONFIGURATION - There are several areas
for configuration: - Initial shortcuts
- Problems launcher. Allows some one-button changes for display
problems and startup preferences - Pre-game menu selections- Various
configurations for how the rake is handled (percentage max and
amounts down to $0.25 increments); how existing player Profiles
will adjust their game(s)- their Toughness, as it were; settings
for Hold Em rules and variations (max $200/400 fixed bet, $2-10
spread limit, also allows 1-4-8-8 and other by-the-street bet
configuration, among other settings); speed of play; sound/animation
options; number of
hands dealt per hour, etc. - Also has a number of settings for
analysis variations (no bet/no
fold hand comparisons; simulated high-speed, high volume "intelligent"
play evaluation; player/position locks; repeatable scenario plays;
etc.) - There are methods to create and use custom players or
lineups - User can also make adjustments to settings in order
to influence the recommendations of the Advisor Profiles (of which
there are several, mainly dependent on the number of players in
the game at the start) about raising vs. calling, multiple recommendations
and choosing an Advisor from available Profiles During hands,
many configuration choices are still available. This becomes especially
useful with the instant
Replay option, to allow you to analyze the play decisions that
you make under different game structures.
There is a high level of flexibility in the system, allowing
beginning users to enable a large number of tools for help, while
experienced players can focus on specialized areas or
in-depth analysis.
ACTUAL PLAY - Just after you trigger a new game, a window
always appears, allowing you to reconfigure:
- Types of hands dealt (All, Only calling, Only raising).. Latter
two skip hands that don't match bet/cost criteria based on Advisor's
advice, I assume.
- The amount of raising and check-raising
There are also new buttons in this window, with the 4.0 release- shortcuts to Advisor settings and various Toughness screens, for last-minute changes.. or if you missed configuring them originally.
IN-PLAY FEATURES
- Graphics - Standard table has a rectangle-shaped display format,
with 5 hands in a row at
top and bottom.
- User can configure whether some details are presented or hidden
for each player.
- Graphics are clean, simple, uncluttered. If software is configured
to display it, player names, seat and table amounts are displayed
in yellow text.
- Your cards are easy to see and read, as they are pretty large,
as is the board when it is dealt. Actions for each player are
distinct and easy to follow.
- The Deck button also allows user to flip between red or blue-backed,
herringbone pattern cards.
** Omaha/8 has a second table layout choice, supposedly mimics
Internet play table views. Entire rounded table is seen, along
with chip racks. When my eyesight isn't bad, I like the view.
My one main gripe with this feature in Omaha/8 was that it was
harder initially to differentiate
the action from the cards for each player- I have to look more
carefully to see what happened. This was due to smaller lettering
and yellow-colored text that didn't stand out as well for
certain details. Once I got used to the change, it wasn't a big
problem.
You can switch back and forth by configuring this view in Problems
prior to opening the game.
I'd assume that this addition is appearing in release 5.0 of Hold'em.
I generally turn off the sound and animation options. The chips
in the pot sounds startled me when I first heard them. and I don't
need to hear a COMPUTER tell me "Bad beat!" At certain
fast playing speeds (configurable delay between each computer
player's action), many of
these settings are overridden in favor of card speed anyway.
The ring game play mimics b&m play well, given that the graphics are not three-dimensional and you don't see any physical players. A white Dealer button sits on part of the current button's cards. It remains in place, clearly visible, even if the button player folds.
A small red arrow sitting just above the player's left-hand card's corner
indicates current action. Action taken by each player displays
in yellow text above the cards; their name is displayed below
the cards (if configured to), also in yellow text. Their accumulated
profit/loss status, updated instantly, is displayed in red on
a yellow bar that is hiding the bottom edge of the
cards (this also can be removed). Players that fold disappear
from the screen completely.
When the action gets to your player, and the game is fixed limit,
the Call and Raise amounts
are displayed in white under your cards. It's easy to ignore this
as unnecessary. When a
spread limit game is running, this does not get displayed, as
the amount isn't set.
One problem- If you Hit the Bet (for spread limit) or Raise (spread or fixed limit games) button, and then want to change your mind, you cannot. There is no way to cancel the action, you can only limit the amount if allowed.
IN-PLAY OPTIONS - Besides betting/folding options,
the following are available during the
hand:
ZIP - allows you to fold out of turn and zip
the hand to the conclusion. Hand is played the same way as if
you folded in turn. Nice feature if you're being lazy and not
analyzing others' play. or
in a Challenge. or if you're tired and want to move the unplayable
hands along faster. Now,
if only this option was available to me in the cardroom.
ODDS - new for version 4.0, I believe. Selecting
this button either shows the odds of your
hand's improvement on the flop, when you reference the screen
pre-flop. or it displays the
odds of your hand improving by the turn and river (post-flop).
On the turn, it only displays the current pot odds and your current
hand. Each stage before the river also shows current pot
odds.
STATS/RAKE - This button leads to a dozen evaluation
areas, which contain a number of choices on charts or graphs that
illustrate various aspects of your play. Most of these tools
can be configured on the fly to show a large variety of information,
as well as show that information in different formats (bar charts,
pie charts, grids) Some of the included tools that I find very
useful:
a) An overall play evaluation against the Advisor's recommendations
(rankings based on the percentage you were off from that advice
in 4 areas),
b) A cash results record of various starting hands you've repeatedly
held, with details on how much you've invested and profited with
that specific hand,;
c) The Rake/Toke analysis, which is an illuminating tool for examining
the effects of rake structures and tipping procedures
d) A record of hands held, by seat, by street, by type as you
choose.
e) The number of whole and split pots won (which I would assume
would be VERY helpful for
a high-low player)
You can also view Winning/Losing streaks, tightness/aggressiveness tracking,
bad-beat
jackpot frequency (a raking option can be set for this). most
by player, by street as you choose. The graphics on some of these
charts is very nice, whether a choice of pie chart or bar chart,
or 3-D view, or other options.
One other playing option that can be used throughout the play of the hand, rather than just at the end: a mouse Peek option, which can reveal one hand at a time (including your own, if you hid it). This option can also show folded hands that aren't currently visible.
POST-PLAY OPTIONS - The two main options that
are available after a hand has completed play:
REPLAY - This feature allows you to instantly
replay the hand that you just played, without affecting the ongoing
statistical tracking of your play. You can try different tactics
in the same scenario to examine best practices directly. You can
even change most of the various game settings before you replay
the hand, including ante, rake and bet structure, and player toughness.
This feature proves very useful in instantly trying out different
strategies for a particular circumstance. or if you want to investigate
how pot odds could alter the Advisor's recommendations.
LOOK - available at hand's end, shows all hands
originally dealt, including folded hands.
When quitting a game, as opposed to closing the software, you can save that game for future use. This is handled in a simple, efficient manner.
HELP - In the Start Menu shortcut, there is a Readme doc
that contains general summaries of functionality, how Profiles
(player types) are designed on a high level, review of included
Lineups (player table makeup), general concepts of poker, etc.
- Some of this information seems more in-depth, or isn't even
found, in the online Help opened from within the game. I'm not
sure why this separation was chosen, as most players are not going
to go into this document
- Tips- initially a Tips window pops up with
a "tip of the day" window. This can be turned off, or reopened
from within the game at any time. The Tips are summaries of steps
required to implement or execute certain functions within the
game, serve as quick reminders, in a sense.
- Help- This standard Windows on-line help has
information on various game-required topics. More in-depth that
Tips, but not overwhelmingly so. Has standard Windows help Search
functions (Find, Index, Contents) and format.
- Organization- of help documents is okay, though
I've seen better on-line help systems. A little experience made
it fairly easy to navigate through the Contents window and links,
and they were organized in a fairly logical manner. The Index
tab allows for type searching for topic headers.
- Overall, fairly easy to use and find what I
wanted by matching titles to headers. Some of the links could
have been eliminated, just by listing the brief descriptions on
the same page as the original link. - There is some discussion
of the functionality involved in the settings. More in-depth information
on configuration hints, or examples of settings' effects on play,
would have been helpful. - No F1 links are available that I could
find, from game table or Report windows.
CHALLENGE - A one-to-one challenge between
you and the default Advisor. You each play 50, 100 or 200 hands
against the current table settings that you have in place, whether
a full table or less. The exact same hands are dealt to both of
you (the Advisor plays all of the hands first, out of view), so
that you can compare cash results based on the same cards. Advice,
mouse peeking and other related items are not available, forcing
you to play the hands based on your own knowledge. Only the betting
and Zip/Quit options are available until the hand is over. There
is also the option to see the standard Statistical Data charts,
which analyze your play in various ways against the Advisor's
recommended plays, during the Challenge. Unfortunately, this is
not available after the Challenge is over, which is a mistake
in my opinion.
** Note that the latest Omaha/8 Wilson product has removed the available statistics and replaced them only with a simple indicator of your cash status at the time that you check it. Hopefully version 5.0 of Hold 'Em will not duplicate this change in functionality. However, I hope 5.0 WILL include the Challenge history feature that I see in Omaha/8. This feature is an ongoing win/loss/profit total of your own play and the Advisor's that is retained for as long as you'd like.
My experience has been that I match up pretty evenly in the Challenge. My
swings tend to be smaller- I lose less and win less than the Advisor
when it plays- and while I question some of the hands the Advisor
plays, I'm sure he'd question mine if he could. This feature is
very playable. I use it a lot and enjoy trying to catch up when
the Advisor builds a lead. This feature also gives you another
tool to analyze your play- if the supposed 'expert' has results
different from yours, you can then use the charts and other tools
(including Repeatable deals) to
examine where you may differ or other ways to play the hands that
you encountered.
CONFIGURING PLAYERS The system has a checkbox
format for configuring existing players, called Profiles. Using
simple clicks and edits, you can configure how the player will:
play each type of hand combination, preflop; react to various
pot statuses, such as re-raised pots,
based on table position, your hand and how it fits with the board
at each stage (pre-flop, flop, turn, river); and how to play the
hand based on the various board card situations. You can also
add an alternate play for each selection with a percentage adjustment,
but only for before-the-flop play. I'm not sure why this alternate
option wasn't included for post-flop choices. Maybe it would be
too daunting a task for anyone but the most knowledgeable player
to configure these settings with any degree of competence?. or
maybe it would affect software performance too much. You can adjust
or replace the settings for all of the Advisor Profiles, as well
as create
your own custom Profiles (there is room for about 40 additional
Profiles, if needed).
In fact, there are so many choices that I think it would be
daunting for a beginning player to accurately create or extensively
alter a Profile in ways that make playing sense. For example,
the settings for how to play with one pair on board allow you
to individually configure actions in 35 board-fit scenarios, for
early/middle/late positions during the flop, turn and river. Certainly,
when first presented with the plethora of data, beginning users
may feel intimidated in my opinion. (Maybe those users who have
the software currently can comment on that.)
While the process itself is not that complicated and can be
grasped quickly, I believe that this tool is primarily for experienced/advanced
players. Knowledgeable players will have a better understanding
of the game and the combination of factors that are involved in
accurately configuring valid reactions for a certain type of player.
Those types of users, who have the experience and the drive to
fully define the criteria that they are looking for within a Profile,
should find that the depth of coverage is more than enough to
achieve their ends in
simulations and research. (Again, for experienced users who have
extensive experience with this feature, maybe you can share your
opinions on the ease of use and accurate complexity
of the Profiles)
Fortunately, for beginning users, an in-depth review or editing
requirement is not necessary
to utilize Turbo Holdem's flexibility. There are 45 pre-defined
Profiles, with a descriptive phrase and categorization of their
play type, which should give most users more than enough playing
flexibility, especially when combined with Lineups.
CONFIGURING LINEUPS This is much simpler to
accomplish. Users can load any of the
existing 22 Lineups, edit them, or create your own. You can set
the starting positions of the players by seat number in a simple
drag-and-drop manner. The only thing missing is a simple way to
delete a lineup- you must navigate outside of the game to the
folder where the offending Lineup is saved. With Lineups, you
can configure different player combinations and use
them as you'd like, whether in live play or for testing purposes.
You can add the pre-existing Profiles or custom Profiles that
you create.
TESTING TOOLS One of the standout features
of Wilson Software's Turbo products, in my mind, is the various
high-volume, high speed testing tools that you can utilize:
Automatic Test Capability- You can define,
save and run up to 50 tests automatically, in order, utilizing
various data sources: - Saved Lineups, with various player mixes;
- Manually assigned player hands and flops (Stacking the Deck);
and/or - A specific run of random dealt hands that you played
and captured previously (of any length as to number of hands dealt),
known as Repeatable Deals.
Once all of the tests run, all of the related statistics can be displayed and analyzed as you choose.
One important note about Stack the Deck. This
tool has a lot of flexibility in and of itself. You can: - Assign
all cards to all players and the flop - Assign some cards to some
of the players and/or some of the flop.
The system fills in the blanks with random cards, changing randomly
on EACH deal, for as
long as you leave the deck stacked. - Easily re-assign or remove
cards, allowing quick
changes that can be quickly analyzed.
With this feature, you can lock in as much or as little of a
situation as you choose, then continue to play and replay that
same situation with button changes and action changes without
EVER changing the locked in cards. Combined with Repeatable Deals,
this is a great tool that you
can use for high-speed testing. You can easily turn it off by
unstacking the deck at any time.
Showdown Holdem- a no fold/no bet simulation
that continuously runs hands, using the
number of players currently set for the game, for analysis. You
can pause the simulation at
any time, view data through some of the standard Stats/Rake charts,
and then continue or end the simulation. This moves VERY quickly-
on the level of 5 million hands an HOUR according
to the posted stats (and also my manual estimates) This feature
sounds somewhat similar to what I've read about Mike Caro's Poker
Probe software, not that I have ever seen it.
Neither tool above displays the actual play of the hands on screen, hand by hand. That isn't the purpose, evidently.
In different ways, both of these tools give the user powerful
methods for quickly analyzing different scenarios, with enough
repetitions to approach statistical significance, without having
to tie up you computer for days on end. You can easily change
criteria and rerun the tests, thereby quickly and thoroughly investigating
different possible options.
Detailed review of AceSpades
Software
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