Free, solver-backed drills on real spots - designed for five-minute mobile sessions instead of long desktop study.
Lucid Poker (Lucid GTO) is built for detailed GTO study. LeakSeek takes a different angle: mobile-first drilling you can actually keep up with day to day, with instant solver-backed feedback on every decision.
Last updated: 2026-06-01
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This page is marketing comparison content based on publicly visible product positioning and common workflows. Product details may change. Brand names and trademarks belong to their respective owners.
Lucid Poker can feel expensive for everyday use. LeakSeek sits at $14.99/month, and you can start drilling for free.
Lucid Poker's experience can feel less intuitive for quick daily reps. LeakSeek keeps the flow simple: spot, decision, feedback.
Long study blocks are hard to keep up. LeakSeek's five-minute format is easy to repeat daily.
Lucid Poker can be less focused on clearly prioritizing your biggest leaks for day-to-day training. LeakSeek emphasizes playstyle analysis and clear next-step recommendations.
A side-by-side look at how the two trainers compare.
| Feature | LeakSeek | Lucid Poker |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free session every day, or full access for $14.99/month | Paid plans |
| Mobile-first design | Yes | Mobile app available, but heavier UX |
| 5-minute drill format | Yes | Yes |
| Solver-backed feedback | Yes | Yes |
| Instant decision feedback | Yes | Yes |
| iOS + Android apps | Yes | Yes |
| Daily warm-up focus | Yes | Yes |
| Pinpoints leaks and recommends what to train | Yes | Not a core workflow |
No subscription needed to begin training on real spots.
Every drill gives feedback rooted in solver outputs.
Five-minute sessions designed to become a daily habit.
Native iOS and Android apps you carry everywhere.
LeakSeek starts free and has a lower-cost paid tier at $14.99/month.
Both have mobile access, but LeakSeek emphasizes short, repeatable five-minute drills and a simpler flow. LeakSeek also focuses on playstyle analysis to recommend what to train next, while Lucid Poker may emphasize other workflows.
Yes. Feedback on every decision is grounded in solver outputs.
Absolutely - LeakSeek is designed for native iOS and Android with quick mobile sessions in mind.
Lucid Poker offers mobile training, but LeakSeek is designed for quick daily reps, a lower-cost paid tier, and a learning loop that helps you prioritize what to train next.