Post-session poker study

Turn last night’s hands into tomorrow’s edge.

Import a PokerStars or GGPoker session. Royalgrind finds the decisions you repeat, explains the expensive ones, and leaves you with a short study list for next time.

Completed hands only · Private by default · iOS & Android

Session review · Tuesday night

1,842 hands, three things to fix

Start here

Defend the big blind wider against button min-opens.

29 similar spots · folded 11 more often than the reference range.

“Review these before Friday”

AJ74
  1. 01

    BB defense vs BTN

    29 hands · highest cost

  2. 02

    Turn probes in single-raised pots

    18 hands · worth checking

  3. 03

    River bluff selection

    12 hands · already improving

Next review: 15 decisions · about 6 minutes

Ready when you are →

Works from

Your completed hand histories

Helps you choose

What is worth studying next

Never provides

Real-time help while you play

A simple routine

Play. Import. Learn one thing.

Poker study is hard enough without a cockpit full of numbers. Royalgrind turns a completed session into a short review you can actually finish.

01

Bring in the session

Import PokerStars or GGPoker hand histories. Positions, stacks, streets, and actions are reconstructed for review.

02

Find the repetition

Royalgrind groups similar decisions and separates a real pattern from a single rough hand.

03

Leave with a study list

Review the important spots, ask why, then practice a few close decisions before you play again.

This week’s study list

Three patterns, ranked by usefulness

Start here

BB folds too often vs BTN min-open

29 similar decisions · high confidence

Review 15 spots →

Then this

Turn delayed c-bet underused in position

18 similar decisions · medium confidence

Read 6 hands →

Keep watching

River bluff candidates too narrow

12 similar decisions · improving

Check next session →

Personal, not generic

The chart knows the spot. Royalgrind remembers your pattern.

A perfect range is useful. Knowing that you have folded the same defend eleven times this month is more useful before your next session.

Take a closer look
Inside Royalgrind

Less dashboard.
More useful work.

Every part of the app should help answer the same question: after this session, what is the one thing I should understand better?

01

A leak list you can finish

Repeated decisions are grouped and ranked, so you start with the mistake that is both real and worth fixing.

Your hands, not generic advice

02

Hand review with receipts

Replay the action, see the assumptions behind the answer, and know when guidance is solver-backed or approximate.

Sources stay visible

03

A coach that knows the hand

Ask a normal question. Get a plain-language answer that uses the action, stack depth, range context, and your history.

No prompt-writing required

04

Practice from your mistakes

Turn a finding into a small set of similar decisions instead of wandering through a giant spot library.

Short, targeted repetitions

05

Tournament decisions in context

Review bubble and final-table spots with payouts in view, where chip EV alone cannot tell the whole story.

ICM without the fog

06

A follow-up after the next session

Royalgrind checks the same pattern against new hands and tells you whether the habit actually changed.

Study, play, check again

Ask like a player

“Why is the small bet better here?”

The coach starts with the hand in front of you: action, stack depth, board, range assumptions, and similar spots from your own history. The answer stays practical, and its sources stay visible.

Hand 1842 · BTN vs BB · 25bb

Why is betting small better than checking this ace-high turn?

Royalgrind coach

The ace changes how both ranges are perceived. A small bet can pressure pairs below an ace without making your bluffs expensive. You have checked 18 points more often than the reference line in 29 comparable hands, so this is worth reviewing as a pattern—not just as one hand.

Range context · personal sample: 29 · reference labeled

Private beta · iOS and Android

Your next study session is already in your hand history.

Request beta access →

Free during the private beta.