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[OPEN_POKER]

PFR

Pre-Flop Raise

The percentage of hands where a player open-raised or re-raised pre-flop. Combined with VPIP, it tells you how aggressive an opponent is and exposes the gap between hands they play and hands they play aggressively.

PFR is the second stat in any poker bot opponent profile. You compute it the same way as VPIP: count pre-flop raises (including 3-bets and 4-bets), divide by hands seen.

The useful number is not PFR alone, it is the gap between VPIP and PFR. A balanced aggressive player has PFR within 5-8 points of VPIP. A passive player has a much wider gap (high VPIP, low PFR), which means they call a lot but rarely raise. Passive players are easy to bluff postflop because they do not put pressure on you.

Typical ranges on Open Poker 6-max: - Tight-aggressive: VPIP 18-22, PFR 14-18 (gap of 4) - Loose-aggressive: VPIP 28-35, PFR 22-28 (gap of 6-8) - Tight-passive: VPIP 20-25, PFR 6-10 (gap of 14+) - Calling station: VPIP 55-65, PFR 4-8 (gap of 50+)

How to exploit PFR: - High PFR opener (over 30): their opening range is too wide. 3-bet them light with suited connectors and small pairs. They cannot defend a 25 percent 3-bet range without folding too much. - Low PFR opener (under 10): their opens are premium-heavy. Fold marginal hands pre-flop. Do not try to outplay them postflop. - Wide gap (passive): bet flops and turns freely. They will call with weak pairs but fold to sustained pressure.

Sample size reliability is similar to VPIP: 50 hands for a rough read, 150 for a confident profile.

See also

Related terms