
An unknown player showed off their skill and versatility last weekend in the high-stakes cash games on CoinPoker.
‘KraciFisk’ played both no-limit hold’em and pot-limit Omaha en route to winning $87,902. In the no-limit games, they mixed it up as high as $100-$200 with a $40 ante, while they played as big as $50-$100 with a $20 ante in the pot-limit Omaha games.
Today’s high-stakes review will focus on the PLO hands in the session, looking at two pots in his heads-up match against ‘QueTalMuyBien.’
KraciFisk Turns The Nuts
The duo was about 155 big blinds deep at $50-$100. KraciFisk raised on the button to $300, and QueTalMuyBien called.
The flop was 5♠4♣2♠, and QueTalMuyBien checked. KraciFisk continued for $300, QueTalMuyBien potted it for $1,528, and KraciFisk called. QueTalMuyBien potted again for $3,686 on the 8♣ turn, only for KraciFisk to slam it all in for $13,650 effective.
QueTalMuyBien had 8♠7♠4♠4♦ for a set and a combo draw. KraciFisk had the nuts with A♦8♥7♣6♠.
The players ran it twice. Neither the J♣ nor the 7♠ helped QueTalMuyBien, so KraciFisk collected a $30,998 pot.
Some $50-$100 PLO heads-up action. pic.twitter.com/Il2bHO4aAR
— CoinPokerAction (@CoinPokerAction) October 7, 2025
Hand Analysis
Preflop looks normal as KraciFisk has an easy open, and 8-7-4-4 is too disconnected and low to consider a three-bet if it isn’t double-suited.
QueTalMuyBien gets a great flop and they can consider leading these wheel-centric boards. However, they check, and KraciFisk has an interesting decision on whether to continuation-bet. They have a nut wrap and the 6♠, which are good cards to hold here. The ace blocks some straights too.
On the other hand, they don’t block any pairs, and they have a draw that loses some value on a board with two spades. Getting check-raised with these hands isn’t fun, as it sometimes prevents the in-position player from seeing the river because they’ll miss the turn and face a big bet.
Still, the blockers are probably good enough to justify a bet.
QueTalMuyBien has an easy check-raise on a board where their good hands probably want to play pretty aggressively. The lower the texture, the less appeal slowplaying has, since more cards change the nuts. A set with a flush draw is favored over the nut straight with two cards to come, as well.
The turn isn’t an ideal card for QueTalMuyBien since another possible straight comes into play, along with the possibility of even more huge combo draws thanks to the double-flush texture. Still, they have a hand that needs to pile in the money. Many rivers will devalue the holding and it has a lot of equity in general.
KraciFisk has an easy shove with the nuts. QueTalMuyBien still has 37.5% equity according to the Card Player Omaha odds calculator, but KraciFisk manages to hold on both runouts for $30,998.
KraciFisk Beats The Nuts
The player were again 150 big blinds deep for the following hand, but this time they were playing stakes of $25-$50 with a $10 ante.
QueTalMuyBien potted to $150, KraciFisk made it $450, and QueTalMuyBien four-bet to $1,350. KraciFisk called, creating a pot of $2,720 heading to the 10♥9♥7♠ flop.
KraciFisk led out for $813, and QueTalMuyBien called. That brought a 6♠. KraciFisk potted for most of QueTalMuyBien’s remaining money, and QueTalMuyBien shoved for $5,306. KraciFisk called off the remaining $1,000 or so.
QueTalMuyBien showed J♦10♦9♠8♠ for the nuts and a couple of redraws. They were fading a humongous number of cards, as KraciFisk held Q♥J♠10♠6♥ for a double flush draw, two pair, and a straight draw.
The river was the 5♥, filling KraciFisk’s flush draw for a $14,959 pot.
That’s a whole lotta hand for both players on the turn. pic.twitter.com/nfcsNCHJSC
— CoinPokerAction (@CoinPokerAction) October 7, 2025
Hand Analysis
At 150 big blinds, four-betting double-suited and connected hands in position starts to become a lot more attractive when compared with 100-blind poker. These hands have fine equity if they need to get it in preflop against aces, and playability starts becoming more important at these deeper stacks. J-10-9-8 certainly qualifies as good enough.
KraciFisk has a double-suited bluff of their own, but they have way too much equity to fold to the four-bet.
The flop smashes both players, but KraciFisk’s range connects with the texture much more often. They get to play a considerable amount of leads against an aces-heavy range, and that’s exactly what they do, using a small sizing.
For their part, QueTalMuyBien goes with a call. Generally speaking, playing aggressively is best when players have the nuts and a redraw, but playing slow makes sense in this situation, where QueTalMuyBien’s range is suffering quite a disadvantage. KraciFisk has a big edge in sets and straights on this board.
In the actual hand, QueTalMuyBien was actually slightly trailing KraciFisk, per the Omaha odds calculator, so just calling was ideal.
When QueTalMuyBien still has the nuts on the turn, they get to spring the trap and get the money in. Unfortunately, for them, KraciFisk’s draw is so monstrous that it’s actually still slightly favored, 52.5% to 47.5%.
When the flush came home for KraciFisk, they took down another big one on a highly profitable day.
Hungry for more high-stakes poker content? Check out the CoinPoker YouTube channel and Bobby James’ YouTube channel for more action.
