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Compare mode is available on Pro and Elite plans.

What is compare mode?

Compare mode lets you view two or more ranges side by side in the Study workspace. It’s useful for:
  • Comparing your range against a solver solution
  • Seeing how a range changes between positions
  • Comparing opening ranges across different stack depths
  • Reviewing differences between GTO and simplified ranges

Enter compare mode

1

Open the Study workspace

Navigate to Study and select a spot.
2

Click Compare in the toolbar

In the toolbar above the grid, click the Compare button.
3

Add ranges to compare

The workspace splits to show multiple grids. Click Add on the empty panel to select another spot or strategy to compare against.
You can compare up to 4 ranges simultaneously.

Diff overlay

When comparing ranges, you can enable the Diff overlay to highlight cell-by-cell differences between two ranges:
ColorMeaning
GreenCells that match (same action in both ranges)
RedCells that differ (different actions between ranges)
GrayCells that are empty in both ranges
The diff overlay makes it immediately obvious where two ranges disagree.

Diff info panel

When the diff overlay is active, a Diff Info panel shows summary statistics:
  • Total cells that match
  • Total cells that differ
  • Percentage agreement
  • Which hand classes have the most differences

Synced navigation

In compare mode, you can enable synced navigation. When enabled, selecting a new spot in one panel automatically loads the equivalent spot in the other panels. This lets you quickly step through all positions and compare the same decision across strategies.

Exit compare mode

Click the Compare button in the toolbar again to return to the single-grid view.

Practical uses

Compare your ranges against the Library. Add a GTO solution from the Library, then compare it against your custom range for the same spot. The diff overlay shows exactly where you deviate from GTO, which can help you decide if those deviations are intentional or accidental.
  • Before and after import — Compare your hand-built range against the solver output before replacing it
  • Stack depth comparison — See how your opening range should change between 100bb and 25bb
  • Coach review — Compare your ranges against a coach’s recommended ranges