It’s a difficult situation when a flop like this happens and I know I’m likely beat.
Losing to queens at showdown makes me wonder if I could have done better.
Preflop: ISOing is a must with jacks, we don’t want a bunch of limpers with a hand like this. I used a tournament sizing, but it’s perhaps too small for ring games: people call often, and we need to fold out hands like Qx and Kx.
Flop: It sucks to bet into a likely losing pot, but the board sure does smash my ISOing range. (I think that theoretically a calling range should be stronger than my ISOing range, but my experience on the site says that’s not true.) If I don’t bet on a board like this, I can easily get pushed out of the pot. I go small to keep my range uncapped, but the small I bet, the harder it is to push out Qx and Ax with weak kicker. I wonder what the optimal sizing is.
In any case, I figure if I get folds, I’m happy, if I see a raise, I can snap-fold. Annoyingly enough, I get two callers in position on me.
Turn/River: If I knew it was a queen I was facing, I’d barrel it off to try to get it to fold. As stands, I think it’s likely someone is holding an ace and unwilling to let go of it. I decide to cut losses and give up.
Is there any way I could have done better? Obviously in this specific situation, checking the flop would have lost me less money (and checking is better in general in multi-way flops), and barrelling would have likely won me the pot. But I’m asking what the correct play is in general, not knowing the opponents hands.