Opening ranges

N

Nesehorn156

Enthusiast
Silver Level
Joined
Jan 22, 2026
Total posts
40
NO
Poker Chips
62
  • #1
I’ve noticed that my opening ranges tend to change a lot depending on where I am in a tournament. Early on I usually play tighter and focus on strong hands, but as blinds increase I start opening wider, especially from late position. Sometimes I’m not sure if I’m adjusting enough or just reacting to pressure from the blinds. Stack sizes and table dynamics also play a big role in my decisions. I’m curious how others handle this. Do you actively change your ranges by stage, or do you stick to a more fixed approach?
 
ODRAGD3

ODRAGD3

Rock Star
Bronze Level
Joined
Oct 6, 2015
Total posts
370
Awards
3
VE
Poker Chips
328
  • #2
You're doing the strategy backwards. You have to look for the cards at the beginning, and then when the big blinds raise, it's either a bluff, a raise, or all-in to see a hand or win.

I prefer to multiply my stack at the beginning of the tournament and position myself early so that when the blinds rise, calling cards, even bluffs, doesn't affect me as much.
 
antonis32123

antonis32123

Legend
Loyaler
Joined
Dec 25, 2014
Total posts
7,347
Awards
20
GR
Poker Chips
676
  • #3
I opened a lot my ranges , early and late position , but I found out that this was not my problem when it comes in winning in tournaments . Playing more hands didn't have a good result . Maybe quite the opposite . Especially in freerolls. I guess there is a need for a different strategy for me in poker .
 
B

burba

Rock Star
Silver Level
Joined
Dec 9, 2023
Total posts
242
Poker Chips
574
  • #4
For me it’s a mix, but it’s never a fixed “stage-based” approach. Early on, with deep stacks, I play tighter across all positions and focus on hands that play well postflop, especially out of position. As stacks get shallower, I widen mainly from late position, but that’s driven more by effective stacks, blind tendencies, and who can reshove than by blind pressure alone. If I’m opening wider just because the blinds went up and not because the position and table dynamics support it, that’s usually a sign I’m overadjusting.
 
N

noprob

Rising Star
Bronze Level
Joined
May 15, 2014
Total posts
13
Awards
1
Poker Chips
12
  • #5
I wonder if preflop is really so much important VS postflop. over rated probably
 
K

Kpaprince

Rock Star
Bronze Level
Joined
Aug 5, 2021
Total posts
112
DZ
Poker Chips
110
  • #6
I think you’re thinking about it the right way—opening ranges should change as the tournament progresses, but with structure rather than guesswork. For me, stack size and position matter more than the blind level itself.

Early stages, when stacks are deep, I keep ranges tighter in early position and focus on hands that play well post-flop. As stacks get shallower, especially below 30–40 BB, I widen ranges in late position because stealing blinds becomes much more important and post-flop play is limited.

That said, I try not to widen just because of pressure from blinds. If the table is aggressive or there are strong players behind me, I actually tighten up again. Against passive tables, I’ll open much wider, especially on the button and cutoff.

So I’d say my approach is flexible, but grounded in stack depth, position, and who’s left to act—not just the tournament stage.
 
sibkaz

sibkaz

Legend
Platinum Level
Joined
Oct 27, 2023
Total posts
2,117
Awards
4
KZ
Poker Chips
798
  • #7
The main thing is the position! ) And the range may vary depending on who entered the bank...)
 
Leandro6803

Leandro6803

Visionary
Platinum Level
Joined
Mar 19, 2022
Total posts
636
Awards
2
Poker Chips
988
  • #8
Having a strategy with range-based pricing is the best way to be profitable in the long run.
 
nelomec

nelomec

Visionary
Platinum Level
Joined
Apr 15, 2021
Total posts
547
Awards
1
BR
Poker Chips
412
  • #9
Nesehorn156 said:
I’ve noticed that my opening ranges tend to change a lot depending on where I am in a tournament. Early on I usually play tighter and focus on strong hands, but as blinds increase I start opening wider, especially from late position. Sometimes I’m not sure if I’m adjusting enough or just reacting to pressure from the blinds. Stack sizes and table dynamics also play a big role in my decisions. I’m curious how others handle this. Do you actively change your ranges by stage, or do you stick to a more fixed approach?

In my case, I usually change my strategy depending on the stage of the tournament. At the beginning of the tournament, I play a tighter game with my range, and as the stages progress with the blinds, I adjust my strategy accordingly.
 
Igor Popadyk

Igor Popadyk

Legend
Platinum Level
Joined
May 7, 2015
Total posts
1,338
Awards
7
Poker Chips
721
  • #10
You play quite carefully, I like it, Yab also paid attention to opponents
 
kaynbergo

kaynbergo

Visionary
Platinum Level
Joined
Nov 24, 2022
Total posts
520
Awards
1
UA
Poker Chips
670
  • #11
I play the other way around: at the very beginning of the tournament, I open up a wider range of hands, hoping for luck, as long as my stack allows. But later, if my stack is less than 30 big blinds, I narrow my range of hands and try not to waste my stack on every hand.
 
kunkgreen

kunkgreen

Legend
Bronze Level
Joined
Jun 1, 2022
Total posts
1,372
Awards
4
BR
Poker Chips
712
  • #12
This will depend somewhat on the level of the game we are playing...

And like everything in poker, we have so many variables to analyze that it's difficult to say that we will have a wider range here or there!

Generally, at lower average buy-ins, I believe that having a solid range with few complementary hands is a better fit... This doesn't mean we'll play with a fixed range, but we'll try the best lines, simplifying the actions as much as possible (my view).

As we move up in level, we usually have to adapt better to the characteristics of the tables and we will take into account information about players, effective stack, tournament stage, etc...

In general, with a larger stack, we will play more hands and have both a wider opening and answer range. This also doesn't mean we'll enter with any hand from any position.

We are simply willing to take greater risks, and this is due to greater rewards....

Poker, in the end, is a game of adaptation!
 
Top