The way that Colorado’s seven congressional districts are laid out are a pretty fair representation of how the state’s voters are aligned, according to a tool built by FiveThirtyEight.

The tool, dubbed The Atlas Of Redistricting, shows readers how a given state’s districts are laid out and then provides options to remap the state in a number of ways, from slanting seats to a given party to a fully algorithmic layout that can result in some weird patterns.

Colorado is only seven years removed from the last redistricting fight that gave the state its seventh district. And thanks to a booming population in the last half-decade, groups are already pushing the state to set a level playing field for the state’s eighth district which is expected after the 2020 census.

As it stands, the current map for Colorado is identical to the one that comes up when the “Match partisan breakdown of seats to electorate” option is chosen, which the authors describe as drawing the map with “the goal of making the partisan breakdown of a state’s representatives match the political makeup of the state’s voters.”

(It should be noted that this tool is focused on the state’s U.S. Congressional districts and not the districts for the Colorado state legislature. An AP analysis showed that Colorado is one of just eight states where the state House map is statistically slanted for Democrats.)

Where things get interesting is the way the authors of the tool reshape our state map to favor Democrats or Republicans.

The key to minimizing Republican victories, apparently, is to lump the Colorado Springs and Pueblo urban areas into a district with southern Colorado while giving pieces of the Boulder-Fort Collins-Denver Front Range corridor to five different districts (a reversal of a classic gerrymandering technique like the one that splits up the Austin metro area in Texas).

Democrats, on the other hand, are hurt when the urban core of Denver, Boulder and Fort Collins are isolated into two districts, while the southern suburbs of the metro area are given a district of their own.

Check out the other ways the state can be carved up here.