Living Document

Product & Platform Roadmap

Poker platforms love hype. Players love reliability.

The Level X roadmap is built around deliberate progress: ship useful foundations first, then connect the ecosystem, then expand depth—without sacrificing clarity or trust.

No credit card required. Follow our progress.

Philosophy

A roadmap is not a promise of exact dates. It's a statement of priorities. We focus on building foundations that last.

Current Phase

Phase 2: Depth & Integration — Saved scenarios, tighter study workflows, performance refinements, and improved streaming context.

Infrastructure First

This is how you build infrastructure, not a feature dump.

The Roadmap Philosophy

A roadmap is not a promise of exact dates. It's a statement of priorities.

1

Building foundations that last

2

Integrating features so they reinforce each other

3

Shipping improvements that players feel immediately

4

Keeping the platform stable and fast

This is how you build infrastructure, not a feature dump.

Development Phases

Each phase builds on the last. We ship what works before moving to what's next.

1

Phase 1 — Foundation

Complete

Core ecosystem

Delivered:

  • Unified Level X Poker accounts
  • Core poker tools (Hand Converter, Pot Odds, Equity, ICM, Player Notes, Bankroll Tracker)
  • Web-based architecture (no installs)
  • Initial streaming platform
  • Dashboard as a central hub

If you can't create a stable 'home base' for a player, nothing else matters.

2

Phase 2 — Depth & Integration

In Progress

Making the platform more powerful by connecting the pieces.

Focus Areas:

  • Saved scenarios that move between tools
  • Tighter study workflows tied to real hands
  • Performance and UI refinements
  • Improved context in streaming and content

This phase is about reducing friction and increasing daily usage.

3

Phase 3 — Media & Retention

Upcoming

Poker content designed for serious players.

Planned:

  • Expanded live streaming schedule
  • Full stream archive and search
  • Player-focused production upgrades
  • Creator-native features
  • Learning and entertainment coexisting without noise

Poker content should be a daily destination.

4

Phase 4 — Advanced Tools & Analytics

Planned

Turning data into real competitive leverage.

Planned:

  • Better reporting and longitudinal insights
  • Leak detection concepts
  • Study workflows that translate directly into better play
  • Mobile-friendly tool experiences

This phase turns data into real leverage.

5

Phase 5 — X-Wave Convergence

Future

Bringing gameplay into the ecosystem.

Planned:

  • Unified identity with X-Wave platform
  • Gameplay integration
  • Tool-aware sessions
  • True end-to-end ecosystem

A single poker ecosystem—from play to study to broadcast.

Build your edge like a system

Make Level X Poker your home base: calculate, track, study, and connect—without juggling five different products.

No credit card required. Start free and keep what works.

How the Pieces Connect

Each part of the system reinforces the others.

1

Use a tool page to get the math right

2

Save or copy the output into your study workflow

3

Track outcomes over time with session and bankroll logging

4

Learn faster by turning real hands into structured learning moments

5

Keep your community and feedback loop in one place

A practical weekly routine that actually gets results

A lot of players 'study' by bouncing between random videos and solver screenshots. It feels productive, but it doesn't always translate to better decisions. A cleaner loop looks like this:

1

Play a session with one goal

For example: defend the big blind better. Focus on a single concept or decision type.

2

Capture a handful of hands

Save hands where you felt uncertain about the right play.

3

Run quick math checks

Calculate pot odds and equity so you're not anchored to feelings.

4

Write one sentence of notes

Document what you thought, what you missed, and what you'll do next time.

5

Review before next session

Read your notes before you play again to reinforce the learning.

The point isn't to study more. The point is to study *sharper*—and keep the loop short enough that you repeat it.

Platform FAQs

Both. The platform supports the core math and study workflows that matter in any format, with tournament-specific tools like ICM and deal calculation, plus cash-game fundamentals like pot odds, equity, and range work.

The difference is the ecosystem. A calculator is a moment. A platform is a loop—tools, tracking, learning, and community working together so your improvement compounds over time.

Create your account, open the tool you need, and use it immediately. Most features are designed to work in minutes, not hours—because poker study should feel like momentum, not homework.

No. Level X Poker is web-based, so you can access it anywhere you have a browser. That keeps you up to date automatically—no downloads, no patch cycles, no 'update required' pop-ups.

Yes. The UI and explanations are built to be readable. You can start with basics (pot odds, equity) and scale into more advanced workflows as your game improves.

Watch FAQs

Public previews are available, and members go deeper. Live streams are typically reserved for Pro and Crusher members.

They're designed like an analysis room, not background noise: clean layouts, context-aware overlays, and a focus on the *why* behind decisions.

Yes. The archive exists so you can pause, rewind, and study on your schedule.

Some streams are educational and may include coaching-style breakdowns, but the overall goal is a production-grade viewing experience built for serious players.

Forum FAQs

Yes. The goal is high-signal discussion without the 'you should already know this' attitude.

Hand reviews, strategy questions, guides, and discussion threads. The best communities reward clarity and effort.

Upvotes and downvotes surface the best content and reward contributors. Over time, helpful players gain reputation and visibility.

Yes—saving and organizing posts is how you turn good advice into long-term improvement.

Tool FAQs

You can start for free. When you upgrade, you're paying for scale (more history, saved scenarios, deeper integrations), not for basic access.

Yes. The tools are web-based and designed to be usable on modern mobile browsers—great for breaks during live sessions.

Yes. Cash games, tournaments, and sit & gos all benefit from the same core math. Tournament-specific features emphasize ICM and payout pressure.

The goal is the opposite: fast inputs, clear outputs, and fewer clicks. Poker decisions are time-sensitive, and study should feel frictionless.

Common objections (and the honest answers)

A: You can—and you should, at first. The question is whether your tools become a *system*. Free calculators are usually isolated moments. A platform helps you keep history, connect insights, and build habits that compound.
A: Neither do we. The point isn't to become a spreadsheet. The point is to remove the few recurring mistakes that cost you the most—so the game becomes simpler, not harder.
A: No. Poker has variance. What tools and education can do is increase decision quality and consistency. Over enough hands, that's the difference between break-even and profitable.
A: That's exactly why the workflow matters. The platform is built to reduce friction and shorten the loop from 'I'm confused in this spot' to 'I understand it now.'

Poker Glossary

EV (Expected Value)

The average amount you expect to win or lose from a decision if you repeated it many times. EV is why you can play well and still lose today—and why bad players can win short-term.

Equity

Your share of the pot on average at showdown, given the hands/ranges involved. Equity answers 'how often do I win if we run it out?'

Pot Odds

The price you're being laid to call. Pot odds tell you the break-even equity you need to continue profitably.

Implied Odds

Extra money you can win on later streets when you hit. Pot odds is the floor; implied odds is the upside.

ICM

Independent Chip Model. A way to convert tournament chip stacks into real-money equity based on payout structures. It explains why 'chip EV' and 'money EV' can disagree.

Variance

The natural swinginess of outcomes in poker. Variance is not unfairness; it's the tax you pay to play a high-luck, high-skill game.

Use cases players actually have

Quick decision check

Between hands, verify pot odds or equity so you don't compound guessing.

Post-session review

Convert a handful of hands and review them with one objective.

Study group prep

Bring clean hands and a clear question so feedback is useful.

Tournament endgame

Use ICM to avoid 'felt right' punts near pay jumps.

Bankroll clarity

Track sessions and expenses so you know true profit and risk posture.

Exploit database

Build notes on recurring opponents and patterns so you stop relying on memory.

Risk Advisory

Poker involves risk. Tools and education can improve decision quality, but outcomes still vary due to variance. Responsible bankroll management and realistic expectations are part of playing well.