![]() ![]() Minimally, it would be nice to just be able to use the main program’s Hands, Recent Hands and Position views for opponents as well as yourself.Īs far as the main program goes, its summary statistics and line charts are pretty slick, as you can see from the video walkthrough on the Poker Copilot homepage. Ideally, from the HUD I’d be able to click an opponent and get a sortable hand-history window with columns like hole cards (if known), preflop action (raise/limp/call/RR/fold/raise+fold to RR etc.), total preflop bet, position, flop action and outcome (folded on turn, lost at showdown to QQ etc.). For instance, I’d like to see an opponents’ hand history along with things like position and hole cards, to try to figure out, say, how/why they’re varying their preflop raises. One drawback is that when you click on an opponent (either in the HUD or main program), you don’t get nearly the same depth of information you can about yourself, or that programs like Poker Tracker provide. I’d love it if I could input custom functions for analysis (I’ll say more on this later), and I suppose it would be cool if it integrated note-taking and did some other things Poker Tracker does, although those aren’t a priority for me. The HUD works perfectly well for my needs. I was about to file a bug/feature report about it, but then I found that Steve’s already fixed it in version 1.62 - and now you can drag and drop the HUD boxes anywhere you want. One thing you’ll notice about my screenshot is that the hole cards of the upper-right player are obscured by the HUD, which I found to be super annoying because the hole cards only flash for a second or so. There’s also a short video of the HUD on the Poker Copilot blog. Here’s what the HUD looks like (click to enlarge): But Copilot also offers a HUD (or heads-up display) that overlays your opponents’ stats right on the poker table while you’re playing, which is the main reason I wanted it and the feature I use most. It maintains a database of all the hands you’ve played and calculates a bunch of standard summary statistics (% flops seen, % aggression) that you can use to study your own play and your opponents’, and analyze using both sortable tables and pretty line graphs. Poker Copilot can be used on its own, purely as an analysis tool for your past games. Given that, I can say first of all, without hesitation, that Copilot is absolutely worth a look if you’re on a Mac and not using any analysis software at all (it’s a snap to download and install, and you can use it for 30 days without registering). Poker Copilot is currently the only actively developed poker software for Mac OS X folks like me, since Mac Poker Pro is apparent abandonware and Poker Tracker’s Mac port has been repeatedly postponed. I’m not an expert poker player, haven’t used a lot of other poker tracking software, and have only been using Poker Copilot for a week, so I’m not going to do an exhaustive review, just share some first thoughts. Sticks 8:31 pm Review/first impressions of Poker Copilot software for Mac OS X ![]()
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