What Is Board Texture?
Board texture describes the characteristics of the community cards — how coordinated, suited, and connected they are. Reading board texture tells you how likely opponents are to have strong hands or draws, which directly affects how you should play.
On the deal page, the board texture indicator automatically classifies the flop, turn, and river for you, showing badges for wetness, suitedness, and connectedness.
Suitedness
Monotone
All three flop cards are the same suit (e.g., A♠ 8♠ 3♠). Flushes are extremely likely. If you don't have two cards of that suit, proceed with extreme caution. Even one-card flush draws are dangerous because they're so common.
Two-Tone
Two cards share a suit (e.g., K♥ 9♥ 4♦). Flush draws are possible but require two suited hole cards. This is the most common flop texture. Bet to charge draws or check back with marginal hands.
Rainbow
All three suits are different (e.g., J♣ 7♦ 2♠). No flush draw is possible on the flop. Rainbow boards are generally drier and favor the preflop raiser. You can c-bet smaller since you don't need to charge flush draws.
Connectedness
Connected
Board cards are close in rank with multiple straight possibilities (e.g., 8-9-T). Many hole card combinations make straights or straight draws here. Bet aggressively to protect your hand, or proceed cautiously if you don't have a strong holding.
Semi-Connected
Some straight possibilities exist but fewer windows (e.g., 8-9-2). A few straight draws are possible but the low card reduces coordination. Standard play applies.
Disconnected
Board cards are spread far apart (e.g., 2-7-K). Very few straight draws are possible. These boards heavily favor high cards and overpairs. C-bet frequently on disconnected boards.
Wet vs. Dry Boards
"Wet" and "dry" are summary terms that combine suitedness and connectedness:
- Wet boards are coordinated — flush draws, straight draws, or both are likely. Examples: J♥ T♥ 9♣, Q♠ J♠ 8♠. Bet bigger to deny draws cheap equity. Don't slowplay.
- Dry boards are uncoordinated — few draws possible. Examples: K♦ 7♣ 2♠, A♠ 8♦ 3♣. Bet smaller since opponents have fewer draws. Slowplaying is safer.
- Semi-wet boards fall in between. One draw type is present but not both. Adjust sizing accordingly.
How Texture Affects Strategy
| Texture | C-Bet Size | Slowplay? | Draw Frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wet | Large (66-100%) | Rarely | High |
| Semi-wet | Medium (33-66%) | Sometimes | Moderate |
| Dry | Small (25-33%) | Often OK | Low |
- Wet boards: Bet bigger to price out draws. Fast-play strong hands. Check-raise draws as semi-bluffs.
- Dry boards: Bet smaller because opponents fold or call with limited draws. Trapping with strong hands is viable.
- Paired boards: Reduce c-bet frequency. Full houses and trips are more likely. Check back medium-strength hands.
Next Steps
- Try the calculator — deal a flop and see the board texture badges in real time.
- Learn about c-betting to apply texture reads to your continuation bets.
- Study hand reading to narrow opponent ranges based on board texture.
- Study bluffing to understand how texture creates bluffing opportunities.