Tournament range
15BB Hijack Range
15BB Hijack Range decisions depend on being first in, how much fold equity remains, and how well each hand performs when called. This page groups exact generated spots around the same stack and position so you can study the range instead of one isolated hand.
Range adjustments
- 15BB allows more raise/fold and reshove decisions.
- hijack position requires more discipline because more players can continue.
- Suited aces, pairs, and broadway hands gain value when they combine blockers with called equity.
- Calling off should stay tighter than first-in aggression because calls do not win the pot immediately.
Exact spots
Hands inside this range cluster
Related ranges
Compare nearby ranges
Final Table 15BB Hijack Range
Study final table 15bb hijack range decisions with ICM pressure, exact spot links, and tournament-stage adjustments.
15BB Button Range
Study 15BB button tournament range decisions with exact spot links, shove/fold notes, and short-stack adjustments.
15BB Cutoff Range
Study 15BB cutoff tournament range decisions with exact spot links, shove/fold notes, and short-stack adjustments.
Final Table 15BB Cutoff Range
Study final table 15bb cutoff range decisions with ICM pressure, exact spot links, and tournament-stage adjustments.
10BB Button Shove Range
Study 10BB button tournament range decisions with exact spot links, shove/fold notes, and short-stack adjustments.
10BB Cutoff Shove Range
Study 10BB cutoff tournament range decisions with exact spot links, shove/fold notes, and short-stack adjustments.
Strategy guides
Read the concept behind it
6 min
15BB Poker Strategy For Tournament Players
Learn how 15 big blind tournament strategy differs from pure push-fold, with raise-fold, reshove, and open-shove spots.
6 min
15BB Poker Strategy For Tournament Players
Learn how 15 big blind tournament strategy differs from pure push-fold, with raise-fold, reshove, and open-shove spots.
6 min
Fold Equity In Poker: Tournament Shove Strategy
Understand fold equity in poker and why it is the engine behind short-stack tournament shoves and resteals.