Different rivals, different pressure
The opponent roster includes cautious and aggressive personalities. Some bank modest pots, some chase large totals, and one may deliberately take unconventional directions. Their behavior creates varied scoreboards, but your own decisions should still be based on probability and position.
Do not copy reckless leaders
An aggressive rival can jump ahead through a lucky streak. Matching every risk is usually a mistake, especially early. Build banked points and wait for the scoreboard to prove that a larger chase is necessary.
Punish cautious scoring
Cautious opponents often survive but may bank smaller totals. Against a low-scoring table, consistent medium banks can be enough. You do not need a spectacular run when steady points already create first place.
Recognize final-round urgency
Once someone reaches 100, the final round changes the objective. If you lead, prioritize protection. If you trail by a reachable amount, plan a target pot before banking. If you trail by a large amount, accept that a high-risk run may be the only path to victory.
Use the whole scoreboard
Compare all banked totals, not only the leader. Rating rewards your finishing position, so moving from sixth to third can still be valuable even when first place is unlikely. A sensible bank can improve the result without winning the game.
Let opponents bust
You are not required to outscore an unbanked rival pot. Until points are banked, they are vulnerable. Avoid taking extra risk merely because another player is temporarily building a large round.
Play your plan
Opponent personalities are designed to create pressure and variety. The durable response is a clear plan: follow the remaining-number odds, use pot-based banking thresholds, and change risk only when the score situation justifies it.
