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Transitioning from Texas Hold’em to Six-Plus Hold’em

David Parker
David Parker
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Mastering Six-Plus Hold’em requires embracing volatility, rethinking hand values and staying aggressive

Transitioning from traditional Texas Hold’em to Six-Plus Hold’em (also called Short Deck) requires adjusting both your mindset and core strategy. The game uses a smaller deck, removing all cards below a six, which shifts hand values, equity spreads, and preflop dynamics. Players who rely on standard Hold’em instincts quickly learn that many familiar spots behave differently in this faster, more volatile format.

The most important change is how hand strength compares at showdown. Because there are fewer low cards, strong draws and premium starting hands appear more often. Straights become easier to make, while flushes are harder because there are fewer suited cards in the deck.

For this reason, Six-Plus uses a different hand-ranking system where a flush beats a full house and three of a kind outranks a straight. Understanding these rankings is essential before diving into real-money play.

Starting hand selection also shifts. Hands like A-K and A-Q gain value because high cards dominate the reduced deck. Medium pocket pairs become more powerful as the odds of flopping sets increase.

Meanwhile, speculative hands that depend on small connectors or weak suited combinations lose value because those cards no longer exist. Adjusting your opening ranges to favor broadway cards and stronger pairs helps compensate for the game’s higher equity compression.

Aggression plays a bigger role in Six-Plus Hold’em. With more hands being competitive preflop and more drawing combinations available, players cannot rely on passive play. Semi-bluffing becomes even more effective because draws often carry significant equity, especially when chasing open-ended straight possibilities. Post-flop decisions demand courage, as many situations create close equity matchups.

Position remains important but for slightly different reasons. Being last to act allows you to control the pot when multiple strong hands or draws are possible. The smaller deck creates more multiway pressure, making positional advantage worth even more.

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