Fast fold poker (aka Zoom) can be quite appealing due to its lightning fast action. Less waiting and more playing, what could be better?  
However, it does have considerable disadvantages to regular games, namely the inability to seat select and difficulty in getting reliable reads due to the player's anonymity.
 
This means that you’re expected to have a lower winrate in zoom games than you would on the regular tables.
However, it does have considerable disadvantages to regular games, namely the inability to seat select and difficulty in getting reliable reads due to the player's anonymity.
This means that you’re expected to have a lower winrate in zoom games than you would on the regular tables.
  Nonetheless, Zoom poker can still be profitable, because the sheer amount of
  volume can more than make up for the lower winrate. But it’s only the case if
  you’re actually beating your current limit.
  This article will teach you 8 simple but highly effective ways to increase your Zoom poker winrate so you can have the
  best of both worlds. 
More volume and a better bottom line!
1. Loose and Aggressive is The Way To Go
  Zoom games play significantly tighter than regular games. It’s inherent to the
  game format, so even the recreational players will play tighter on
  average. 
  One of the reasons they play looser than they should is because they primarily
  play for fun, and often don’t feel like waiting for a good hand.
  They get impatient and frustrated quickly, which causes them to play hands
  they shouldn’t be playing, chasing draws they shouldn’t be chasing and so
  on. 
  That’s not really the case in zoom games, as you can just spam the fold button
  until you get a decent hand. 
That’s true for the regulars as well, of course.
  This means players are a lot more selective with their starting hands. 
  In poker, the best strategy is the opposite of the one your opponents are
  playing. So if everyone nits it up, the way to exploit it is loosen up your
  starting hands selection, and up your aggression. 
You can do this with suited connectors for example as I discussed in my brand new advanced suited connector strategy video.
These are the kind of hands that can really increase your Zoom poker winrate if you play them effectively in these games.
By the way, if you just want to learn my simple no BS system for exactly what hands to play, when to bet, raise and bluff, I cover this in extensive detail in my brand new training program, Play Fearless Poker.
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Aggression is Vitally Important to Increasing Your Zoom Poker Winrate
Why?
It's because it's actually really rare to have a strong hand in no-limit Texas hold’em, so
  a lot of players will fold far more often than would be optimal. 
After all,
  why would you fight back with mediocre hands when pocket Aces could be seconds
  away?
  The problem with that kind of thinking, of course, is everyone else is doing
  it. This would make poker a zero-sum game. Everyone is trading money back and
  forth, minus the rake. 
  The way out of that predicament is adapting successfully to the player pool’s
  overall tendencies. 
  And those tendencies would be being very selective with their starting hand
  selection preflop, giving up postflop with all but the strongest holdings, and
  rarely bluffing out of fear villains only continue with the nuts, or close to
  it.
  A successful counter-strategy would then be loosening up with your starting
  hand selection, fighting back postflop with a wider range, and bluffing
  more. 
  While a sound TAG strategy could give you decent results in zoom poker, a LAG
  strategy can have you absolutely crush it.
This is something that is discussed at length in BlackRain79's massive Zoom poker strategy guide, and in all his poker books as well.
  So how does that LAG strategy look like in practice? Let’s take a closer
  look. 
2. Steal The Blinds A Lot in Zoom
  Zoom poker games play significantly tighter than standard tables, and that’s true
  for recreational players and regulars alike.
By the way, make sure you are using a good poker HUD while playing Zoom so you will be able to quickly and easily tell the difference between these player types. 
But anyways, this is why you should get into
  the habit of stealing the blinds much more often than you would usually be
  inclined.
  If you are holding anything even remotely playable, you should be open-raising
  from the cutoff and the button. Even if you get called, you will still see the flop in position and with the range advantage.  

Then you can simply fire off a standard c-bet on all but the most unfavourable boards. Most hands miss most flops, and it’s true in zoom games as much as on regular tables.

Then you can simply fire off a standard c-bet on all but the most unfavourable boards. Most hands miss most flops, and it’s true in zoom games as much as on regular tables.
  If you open-raise to 2.5 BB on the button with any two cards, for example,
  your opponents have to fold only about 63% of the time in order to render your
  steal outright profitable. And if you raise to 2 BB, only 57%. 
  The way you calculate these percentages is by using a simple formula dividing
  risk by risk and reward. 
  So if you raise to 2.5 BB, that’s your risk, and the reward is that risk plus
  reward (i.e. the small blind and the big blind, or 1.5 BB).
  So the formula would look like this:
  2.5 / (2.5+1.5) = 0.625, which equates to 62.5%.
  In plain English, this means that your opponents need to fold about two out of
  three times in order to render your steal attempt profitable. 
  The more they fold, the more you can expand your stealing range. If somebody
  is folding 80% of the time, for example, you can profitably try to steal their
  blinds with basically any two cards. 
  And a great number of players will, in fact, fold their blinds that often, for
  the fear of playing out of position. 
And that’s especially true in anonymous Zoom games, where they aren’t overly concerned with optimally defending their  blinds.
3. Learn to 3-bet Light
  Any decent player knows that the cornerstone of winning poker is playing in
  position as a preflop raiser. 
  So when you see someone open-raise in the late position (the cutoff and the
  button), you can assume their range is far wider than if they open-raised in
  earlier positions. 
  This means they are probably trying to steal the blinds a decent percentage of
  time. 
  Most of the hands that open-raise from late position won’t be able to stand
  the pressure of a 3-bet, so whenever you see someone open-raising on the
  button or the cutoff, consider 3-betting light to re-steal. 
  The best hands to do this with would be the ones that have some playability
  postflop if your 3-bet gets called.
Suited connectors are once again a strong candidate for light 3betting as BlackRain79 discusses in another recent video, re-raising preflop with 8♦7♦ and then making a huge bluff after the flop.
But hands like suited Aces or suited Kings are even better candidates for a couple of
  reasons. 
  First, they have blocking power, meaning they reduce the number of strong
  holdings your opponent can theoretically have, like Aces, Kings, Ace-King or
  Ace-Queen. 
  If you hold an Ace, for example, you reduce the number of combos of Aces in
  your opponent’s range from 6 to only 3, and the number of combos of AK from 16
  to 12. 
  (It might be useful to remember that there are 6 possible combinations of any
  pocket pair, and 16 combinations of unpaired hands - 4 suited and 12 offsuit
  combinations). 
  What this means in practice is that blockers reduce the chances of your
  opponent having really strong hands, so it makes it more profitable for you to
  bluff them.
This is a fairly sophisticated part of modern poker theory that most of the best advanced poker training sites are now teaching you these days.
  The second reason to use suited Aces and Kings for light 3-bets is they have
  decent playability postflop if your 3-bet gets called, because they can make
  flop strong flushes and flush draws. 
  So if you hit the flop, you’re going to hit it hard, and you’ll be able to
  play for a huge pot. One advantage of 3-bet pots is they have shallower SPR
  (stack-to-pot ratio), so they basically play themselves. 
  If you connect with the flop, the rest of the hand should be pretty
  straightforward, and if you miss, you can just give up without risking the
  rest of your stack.
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4. Float The Flop Often
  It’s easier to float the flop (call with the intention of stealing the pot on
  consecutive streets) in position than out of position, but either way it can
  be profitable because a lot of players will give up way too often on the
  turn. 
  The reason for this is basically everyone already knows these days that you
  should c-bet the flop with quite a broad range (70% or so is the default). 
And
  mathematically speaking, you are bound to hit the flop in any meaningful way
  only about 33% of the time (2 out of every 3 hands miss the flop completely).

This means that a lot of players will c-bet the flop not because they’ve hit, and not because they believe the flop doesn’t interact well with the caller’s range, but simply because “it’s standard.”

This means that a lot of players will c-bet the flop not because they’ve hit, and not because they believe the flop doesn’t interact well with the caller’s range, but simply because “it’s standard.”
By the way, there is tons of good poker software you can use these days to identify these types of player straight away...and ultimately exploit the heck out of them!
  Because when they get called on the flop, they often don’t know how to proceed on
  consecutive streets, and they simply give up if they don’t have a strong hand
  (which they don’t most of the time). 
  So when the villain checks to you on the turn, it can be outright profitable
  to simply fire off a half-pot bet and try to steal the pot then and there,
  regardless of what you’re actually holding. 
  If you bet half the pot on the turn, the villain only needs to fold more than
  33% of the time (or one out of three times) in order for your play to be +EV,
  and they’re bound to fold a lot more often than that, especially if you’re
  playing in position.
  And even if you get called, you still have one more street to try to outplay
  them.
By the way, I discuss this in much more detail in my new Elite Poker University training. 
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  This play works best when you pick up some equity on the turn (additional hand
  equity never hurts), but again, this play works so well often enough
  regardless of your hand strength.
  If you are playing out of position, however, and the turn goes check-check
  after villain’s flop c-bet, you can also try to take the pot away on the river
  with a probe bet. 
  A probe bet is a bet made out of position when your opponent missed the
  opportunity to c-bet on the previous street. 
  If the turn checks through, it’s more than likely the villain just gave up the
  pot, so probing the river can also be profitable even if you’re holding total
  air. 
  It also needs to work only slightly more than 33% of the time to be +EV.
For more on floating the flop in Zoom poker games, this is covered in much more detail in The Micro Stakes Playbook.
5. Check-raise When You Pick Up Equity on The Turn
  A great counter strategy against players who’ve learned you should float the
  flop widely is check-raising the turn. 
  Playing with a positional disadvantage is hard to do profitably, so this is
  one way with which you can counteract it successfully.
BlackRain79 shows you exactly how to use this turn check-raise strategy (and get ALL of their money) in another recent video.
  The best situation to do so is when you are playing out of position against an
  opponent's wide ranges. For example, small blind against a big blind, or a
  cutoff open against the button’s flat call. 
  In these situations, you will fire off a standard c-bet fairly often, and you
  will get called quite often and quite wide as well. So when the turn comes,
  you might be inclined to just give up and check-fold. 
  But you can consider check-raising instead, as this will signify incredible
  strength. 
  Your opponent will have a hard time continuing, because he’ll often assume you
  just gave up because you didn’t continue barreling, so he’ll try to steal the
  pot away from you, often with total air.
  Check-raising the turn out of position like this could be more profitable than
  the standard double barrel (i.e. c-betting the turn) because if you c-bet the
  turn, you will either:  
A) force your opponent to fold all air in his range and
  B) only get action from hands that have you beat or have a significant amount
  of equity against you.
  And since in this particular situation your opponent will in fact have a
  significant amount of total air in his range, you’ll be able to extract more
  value with a check-raise.
  The best hands to do this with are the ones that pick up some sort of equity
  on the turn, like a straight or a flush draw, for example. That way you still
  have something to fall back on if your check raise gets called.
For much more on playing the turn effectively check out my recent complete strategy guide on how to play the turn much more profitably.
6. Learn to Play Deepstacked Zoom Poker Games
  One of the biggest edges you can get in poker in general (but in zoom
  particularly) is knowing how to play deepstacked. 
  If no-limit Texas hold’em is the Cadillac of poker, then deepstacked no-limit
  Texas hold’em is a Ferrari (pardon the clunky analogy). 
  A deep stack is a stack with 200 big blinds or more, and this is where the
  skill edge is most pronounced. That’s because you are usually forced to play
  all three streets with a significant portion of the stack behind, so the
  decisions get more complex, and mistakes get more costly. 
  In most tournaments, for example, the stacks are considerably shallower, so
  most of the decisions are made preflop and on the flop. When the flop comes,
  you are either pot-committed or not, and the hands basically play
  themselves. 
By the way, for a deep dive on tournament strategy check out BlackRain79's ultimate guide to small stakes mtt strategy.
  That’s not the case with deepstacked poker. Here hand values change
  dramatically, so your strategy has to change as well. 
  With shorter effective stack sizes, top pair hands go up, while speculative
  hands (like middle pairs and suited connectors) go down in relative value.
  With deep stacks, it’s exactly the opposite. 
  Top pair hands go down in value because of their vulnerability. They can get
  outdrawn and get relatively weaker by the river, and it’s hard for them to get
  action by weaker hands. 
  Speculative hands, on the other hand, go up in value, and the deeper the
  stacks, the more valuable they become. 
  The reason for this, of course is the implied odds. The bigger the stack left
  behind, the better the potential payoff if they improve on consecutive
  streets.
  This is something to keep in mind when selecting hands preflop. If the
  effective stack size is very deep, you might consider playing speculative
  hands you wouldn’t play with an effective stack size of 100 big blinds or
  less. 
  You should also be very careful with playing vulnerable hands that could
  potentially cost you more than you could theoretically earn. 
  If you have a top pair hand for example, you should exercise caution and try
  to pot control instead of blowing up the pot disproportionately to your
  relative hand strength.
  While there might be nothing wrong with 4-bet shoving AKs preflop with an
  effective stack size of 80 BB, like a lot of poker training sites teach you these days, doing it with an effective stack size of 200 BB
  can be an outright catastrophe.
  The best case scenario is you’re coin flipping against Queens or Jacks, and
  worst (and far more likely) is you’re a 3 to 1 dog against Aces and
  Kings. 
7. Be Prepared For Some Wild Variance in Zoom
  One of the crucial things to keep in mind is that while zoom games can be
  insanely profitable with the sheer amount of volume you’re able to put in, it
  does come at a price, namely the lower winrate. 
Lower winrate means more variance. 
  So in order not to be negatively affected by it, it pays to prepare in advance
  for it. This means having a bankroll that can sustain prolonged periods of bad
  variance without you being negatively affected by it. 
  If dealing with variance is a potential issue for you, and prolonged periods
  of bad luck tends to push you off the rails, you might start making mistakes that can be absolutely detrimental to your winrate, and your bottom line.

What’s more, due to the unbelievable speed of zoom poker, you might spew off your chips in a quick succession, and before you know it, you’re down 5 buyins.

What’s more, due to the unbelievable speed of zoom poker, you might spew off your chips in a quick succession, and before you know it, you’re down 5 buyins.
String a couple of sessions like that in a row and it’s a recipe for a
  disaster.
  Think of it this way: 
Every chip you don’t lose to tilt is a chip you don’t
  have to earn back by playing your absolute best. A penny saved is a penny
  earned.
  If on average you lose one big blind per hundred hands because of an avoidable
  mistake, that’s one big blind too many.
  Poker is a business of razor-thin margins, and zoom poker especially so. You
  should try to look for every edge you can, however small or insignificant it
  might seem to you.
This is something that BlackRain79 discusses in far more detail in Modern Small Stakes.
  And having a peace of mind is a huge edge to have, relatively speaking,
  especially in such a competitive environment. So do yourself, and your winrate
  a favour, and get a big fat bankroll. 
  That way you can dispense with fretting about your winrate altogether, and
  focus on playing every hand to the best of your abilities. 
8. Avoid Decision Fatigue
  This one doesn’t really have to do with the strategy element, but is crucial
  nonetheless, particularly for zoom games. 
  Zoom poker plays significantly faster than regular tables, so what this means
  in practice is an increased number of decisions you have to make in a short
  time span.
This is why it is so important to use a good free poker HUD in order to get fast reads on your opponents and increase your Zoom poker winrate. 


But the speed of Zoom can also quickly lead to decision fatigue, i.e. the deteriorating quality of
  decisions made after a long session of decision making. 
  If you know the proven winning strategy intimately and can make optimal
  decisions without using up a lot of mental energy, decision fatigue will be
  less of a concern for you. 
Compare this to someone who still has to ask themselves about basic preflop starting hand decisions for example, and this will lead to a lot of mental decision fatigue for them.
  Poker is extremely intellectually challenging, unless you’re just playing it
  for fun to unwind with a beer in hand after a long week. But if you’re playing
  to win, then it will definitely take a toll on your mental resources. 
  Think about the following scenario: you sit down to play, you’re totally tuned
  in to the action, you’re making great reads, pulling off huge bluffs in
  marginal spots and overall playing your A+ game.
  You’re up three buyins, you’re dealt Aces, you 4-bet shove them all-in against
  a fish, and you lose to K3s. It doesn’t matter, you tell yourself. You’re
  still up in a session, the games are good, and you’re killing it. 
  The session continues, you start missing your draws, your bluffs don’t pull
  through, and the deck has gone cold. You haven’t had a decent hand in half an
  hour, and you’re finally dealt Ace King. 
You 3-bet preflop, hit an Ace on the
  flop, and fire off three barrels on the flop, turn and river, and you get
  snapped by a set of Jacks. 
  You completely lose your marbles and the session is ruined. You can’t get back
  to your A game, and you quit in frustration.
You might be suffering from decision fatigue. 
  Somewhere along the way, you started playing on autopilot to conserve mental
  energy. You get a good hand, you bet, you get a bad hand, you fold. 
  You don’t think through your opponent’s range, your perceived range, the board
  runout, pot odds and implied odds, you don’t take future streets into account.
  You’re just going through the motions. 
  This can be absolutely detrimental to your winrate, because unlike tilt, which
  you’re hopefully able to recognize on time and take a breather, this is far
  more insidious, because you don’t even realize how it’s affecting your
  play. 
  So ask yourself consciously how you’re doing throughout the session. Are you
  completely tuned in, paying attention and thinking through your decisions, or
  are you just going through the motions and waiting around for the nuts? 
If it’s the latter, a break might be in order.
Can Anyone Quickly Improve Their Zoom Poker Winnings These Days?
  Zoom poker has an inherently lower winrate due to the lack of ability to table
  select and seat select, but the sheer amount of volume can more than make up
  for it, so if you know what you are doing, it can be more profitable
  overall. 
  You just need to know the right strategy and adapt successfully and use the
  game format to your advantage.
  And luckily, you don't really have to know a ton of super
  advanced poker strategy
  these days to beat these games consistently.
  Successful adaptation is playing the opposite style of the majority of the
  player pool you are up against. 
  Since zoom games play significantly tighter than regular games, the most
  profitable strategy is therefore a loose and aggressive (LAG) style. This
  means playing more hands preflop, upping your aggression and bluffing more.
  One easy way to instantly boost your Zoom winrate is stealing more blinds. Since a
  lot of players will refrain from playing out of position and Aces are just
  around the corner, they don’t defend their blinds nearly as often they
  should. 
  They fold their big blind 80% of the time, and some of them even more than
  that. If someone is folding their blinds so often, it can be outright
  profitable to try and steal blinds with basically any two cards. 
  You can use a smaller open-raise size (even as little as 2x) to decrease the
  required fold equity. The bigger your open-raise size, the more often your
  opponents need to fold to render your steal attempt profitable.
  Conversely, if you are the one in the blinds and see someone open-raising in
  the late position (the cutoff and the button), you can assume they are trying
  to steal the blinds fairly often, so you can 3-bet light to resteal. 
  The best hands to do this with are the ones that have some sort of playability
  post flop if your 3-bet gets called. 
Once again, you can just use a good poker tracking program like PokerTracker in order to see all the data for yourself (which hands you are winning with, and which ones you are losing with).

Suited Aces and Kings are ideal candidates, as not only can they make monster hands post flop, but also have blocker power, which reduces the number of potential strong combos in your opponent’s range (like Aces, Kings, and Ace King).
Suited Aces and Kings are ideal candidates, as not only can they make monster hands post flop, but also have blocker power, which reduces the number of potential strong combos in your opponent’s range (like Aces, Kings, and Ace King).
  If you decide to flat call preflop instead, you should float the flop wider
  than you would usually be inclined and try to steal the pot on consecutive
  streets if your opponent gives up.
  Most players know they should c-bet the flop fairly often, and they will c-bet
  far more often than they’re mathematically expected to connect with the flop
  in any significant way. 
  Most hands miss most flops, and that’s true in zoom as well. A lot of players
  will fire off a “standard” c-bet, but won’t have the heart to keep barreling
  on later streets without a good hand (which they won’t have most of the
  time). 
  You can therefore float in position and simply fire a half-pot bet when they
  check the turn to you, or probe the river out of position if the turn goes
  check-check.
  Another power move you should look to incorporate in your arsenal is the
  counter-strategy to the previous point. Instead of double barreling on the
  turn, you can consider check-raising as a bluff instead. 
  A standard turn c-bet might not always be the most +EV play because you will
  often only get called by better hands, and you force all the worse hands to
  fold. By check-raising instead you can get more value out of all the air in
  your opponent’s range. 
  This play is best employed when you pick up some equity on the turn, like with
  a straight or a flush draw. That way you’re giving yourself more ways to win
  the pot if your bluff doesn’t pull through.
  If you opt for the zoom format, learning to play deepstacked is a must, as
  this is where you allow your skill edge to manifest itself the most.
If you want to learn more, I cover deep-stacked poker strategy for Zoom poker games in my brand new BlackRain79 Elite Poker University.
  Deepstacked poker is an entirely different beast than standard 100 big blinds
  stacks, because you have to play all the streets.  
  Decisions get more complex, and mistakes more costly, but the potential upside
  more than makes up for it. 
  Deepstacked play will influence your starting hand selection. Top pair hands
  go down in value because of their vulnerability, and speculative hands go up
  because of the bigger implied odds.
  So practice pot control with your top pair hands, and look to get involved
  with speculative hands to potentially take down a huge pot. Nothing better for
  your winrate than a huge pot.
While Zoom poker games aren't always the easiest to beat these days, with the right Zoom poker strategy, most people can quickly increase their winnings in these games.
By the way, if you are curious, here are the best Zoom poker winrates these days that you should be shooting for.
Final Thoughts
So Zoom poker strategy aside, one thing to mentally prepare yourself for is more
  variance. Poker is a game of razor-thin margins, and zoom poker especially
  so. 
  If the never-ending swing of ups and downs is a problem for you, do yourself
  and your winrate a favour and get a big fat bankroll.
  Like they say, an ounce of prevention is worth a ton of cure. Worrying about
  losing a considerable chunk of your bankroll, even through no particular fault
  of your own can be debilitating. 
  Losing some money is inevitable, but playing sub-optimally because of it is
  not. 
  Every big blind you don’t lose to tilt is one you don’t need to earn back by
  reading advanced poker strategy on how to increase your winrate. 
  Finally, don’t forget to take a break from time to time. 
We poker players
  often disregard the stress of having to make so many decisions for so much
  money in a short timespan, and it does take a toll, whether we realize it or
  not. 
  Decision fatigue is a real thing. Bigger volume is only an advantage if you’re
  playing your best. If not, you’re just losing money quicker.
  Lastly, if you want to know my complete strategy for crushing Zoom poker
  games, make sure you grab a copy of
  my free poker cheat sheet.


