Thank U 4 Posting
Bluffing is a very important part of being good at poker. The better we are at judging when to bluff the more money we will make. This requires practice-we need to make in-game bluffs that fail so we can learn what we did wrong.
There is no better time to bluff than in a freeroll as it does 0 damage to our
bankroll. The key is to be able to do a hand review of the spot we bluffed and lost to know if even if it lost it was still the right play. Bluffs lose if you are a good player, you just want to win more often than lose.
Some key data points about bluffing -in games where our Villains calls more often (freerolls)
Which player or players on the table will fold? Some will never fold we should know that.
When will players fold? Few players fold to flop bets so we need to know if we are going to bluff how many streets must we bluff on. So flop and turn are must bets when we bluff in freerolls -we cannot stop the bluff after one street.
What boards are good to bluff on vs players who fold less? 962 is good to bluff but 892 is far worse. Why?
What turn cards help us continue the bluff?
What hands do we have on 962 that help us bluff turn?
Learn bluffing strategies and then apply them to freerolls and then review your thought process after the bluff. Was it a good bluff even though you were called?
It is much better to go slowly in freerolls and build the skills you need later than to min cash freerolls- build a small bankroll and lose it trying to learn to bluff then.
Hope this helps