Playing strong hands out of position is always one of the toughest spots in poker, no matter the stakes. The biggest problem is that you give up information every street, so even when you have a good hand, it can feel like you’re walking on thin ice. My main approach is to tighten up a little preflop when I know I’ll be OOP, choosing hands that have better postflop playability. That way I avoid getting stuck in too many marginal spots later.
Postflop, I try not to bloat the pot too early without a clear plan. With strong but not “nutty” hands (like top pair, good kicker), I prefer check-calling a lot of the time to keep weaker hands and bluffs in. When the board is draw heavy, though, I’ll mix in some check-raises to deny
equity and take control of the hand. It’s really opponent-dependent: against players who c-bet way too much, check-raising makes more sense; against stickier opponents, pot control is usually the safer road.
On later streets, I think a lot about SPR and blockers. If the stacks are shallow, I don’t mind going for stacks with strong top pairs or better. Deeper stacks, I get more cautious because I don’t want to face massive bets OOP with just one pair. And on the river, if I’m thinking of
bluffing, I like to use hands that block some of the opponent’s value combos. That way I’m not just “hoping” they fold, but actually making it less likely they hold the nuts.
So in short, my strategy is to play a bit tighter preflop, control pot sizes postflop, and choose very carefully when to go aggressive. It’s definitely not easy, but once you start planning ahead for each street, it becomes a little less painful to be out of position.