Originally Posted by okiman
I'm not a short-handed expert nor do I have as much experience as others, so take these comments with a grain of salt.
1) I'd raise QQ preflop. If you let your opponents see a flop cheap, you don't know where you stand. 3-handed you might be able to get all in preflop against AQ, AJ, JJ, 1010, etc.
2) AJs is a good hand in a 6-handed game. I'd raise preflop.
3) In several instances, you've got a chance to take a stab at orphan pots against weak opponents. Take the free money.
4) Q10s, in position, at a passive table, in a limped pot is playable.
5) K2s when you hit your flush, you've got bad relative position to try and raise here. I am not a big fan of slowplaying since you need so many conditions for it to be correct. But here, you don't have the nuts, but close to it. You've got bad relative position. You've got deep stacked opponents relative to the (very small) pot size. You've got what appears to be the most aggressive player leading strong from the sb. You've got an obvious draw filling in an obvious drawing spot (but fortunately also a straight draw that didn't fill yet). You've got a table with a bunch of weak players but no calling stations. In this specific instance, flat calling that board is likely to get you more action. This is one of the very few spots where I like a slowplay.