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Poker strategy guide · 5 min

Blockers and removal

Blockers matter when they change how many value or bluff combinations remain. A blocker is useful only if it removes hands that matter to the decision.

What to know

A blocker is useful when it removes specific hands that affect the decision. Good bluff blockers remove calls or raises; good bluff-catchers often unblock missed draws while sometimes blocking value. Removal should refine close spots after line, sizing, and board texture make sense.

When to use this guide

  • You know the spot type but want a cleaner reason for the decision.
  • You want practice prompts before opening a trainer session.
  • You need related concepts to review after a missed hand.

Good bluff blockers remove calls

A river bluff improves when your cards reduce the opponent’s strongest calling hands. Holding the ace of a completed flush suit can be powerful because it removes nut flushes while leaving room for the opponent to fold weaker pairs.

Good bluff-catchers unblock bluffs

A bluff-catcher does not need to block value if it blocks too many missed draws. Sometimes the best call is a hand that lets the opponent still have all the natural bluffs.

Removal is a tiebreaker, not the whole decision

Board texture, line, sizing, and population tendencies still come first. Blockers refine close spots after the main strategic story already makes sense.

Practice prompts

  • List the value hands villain represents, then count which ones your cards remove.
  • Choose between two bluff candidates and explain which blocks more calls.
  • Choose between two bluff-catchers and explain which unblocks more bluffs.

Common questions

What is a blocker in poker?

A blocker is a card in your hand that reduces the number of opponent combinations that can value bet, bluff, call, or raise.

How should blockers be used in bluffing?

Use blockers as a tiebreaker for close bluff candidates, favoring hands that remove the opponent’s strongest continues without blocking too many folds.

Next study path

After this page, use the related guides below to connect the concept to a decision you can practice.

  1. 1 River bluff catching Learn how to call rivers using pot odds, blockers, line logic, and the hands your range must defend.
  2. 2 Continuation betting Build a poker continuation-betting plan using range advantage, board texture, blockers, and bet sizing.
  3. 3 3-bet defense Build a practical poker 3-bet defense plan around position, blockers, equity realization, and stack depth.