|
Poker Rules : Poker Basic Rules
Most variants of poker
satisfy the following definition, but
in a home game of course you are free
to modify the rules as you see
fit.
Poker is a card game in
which players bet into a communal pot
during the course of a hand, and in
which the player holding the best hand
at the end of the betting wins the
pot. During a given betting round,
each remaining player in turn may take
one of four actions:
-
Check: a bet of zero
that does not forfeit interest in
the pot
-
Bet or raise: a
nonzero bet greater than preceding
bets that all
successive players must match or
exceed or else forfeit all
interest in
the pot
-
Call: a nonzero bet
equal to a preceding bet that
maintains a player's
interest in the pot
-
Fold: a surrender of
interest in the pot in response to
another players's
bet, accompanied by the loss of
one's cards and previous
bets
Betting usually proceeds
in a circle until each player has
either called all bets or folded.
Different poker games have various
numbers of betting rounds interspersed
with the receipt or replacement of
cards.
Poker is usually played
with a standard 4-suit 52-card deck,
but a joker or other wild cards may be
added. The ace normally plays high,
but can sometimes play low, as
explained below. At the showdown,
those players still remaining compare
their hands according to the following
rankings:
1. Straight flush, five
cards of the same suit in sequence,
such as 76543 of
hearts. Ranked by the top card, so
that AKQJT is the best straight
flush,
also called a royal flush. The ace can
play low to make 5432A, the lowest
straight flush.
2. Four of a kind, four
cards of the same rank accompanied by
a "kicker",
like 44442. Ranked by the quads, so
that 44442 beats 3333K.
3. Full house, three
cards of one rank accompanied by two
of another, such
as 777JJ. Ranked by the trips, so that
44422 beats 333AA.
4. Flush, five cards of
the same suit, such as AJ942 of
hearts. Ranked by
the top card, and then by the next
card, so that AJ942 beats AJ876.
Suits
are not used to break ties.
5. Straight, five cards
in sequence, such as 76543. The ace
plays either
high or low, making AKQJT and 5432A.
"Around the corner" straights like
32AKQ are usually not allowed.
6. Three of a kind,
three cards of the same rank and two
kickers of
different ranks, such as KKK84. Ranked
by the trips, so that KKK84 beats
QQQAK, but QQQAK beats QQQA7.
7. Two pair, two cards
of one rank, two cards of another rank
and a kicker
of a third rank, such as KK449. Ranked
by the top pair, then the bottom
pair and finally the kicker, so that
KK449 beats any of QQJJA, KK22Q,
and
KK445.
8. One pair, two cards
of one rank accompanied by three
kickers of different
ranks, such as AAK53. Ranked by the
pair, followed by each kicker in
turn,
so that AAK53 beats AAK52.
9. High card, any hand
that does not qualify as one of the
better hands
above, such as KJ542 of mixed suits.
Ranked by the top card, then the
second card and so on, as for flushes.
Suits are not used to break
ties.
Suits are not used to
break ties, nor are cards beyond the
fifth; only the best five cards in
each hand are used in the comparison.
In the case of a tie, the pot is split
equally among the winning
hands.
Several variations are
possible when playing for low. Some
games permit the ace to play low and
ignore straights and flushes, making
5432A the best possible low, even if
it makes a straight flush. Other games
just reverse the order used for high
hands, making 75432 of mixed suits the
best possible low. Still others count
straights and flushes against you but
let the ace play low, making 6432A
best. Note that in most games in which
the ace plays low, a pair of aces is
lower than a pair of deuces, just as
an ace is lower than a deuce.
When a joker is in play,
it usually can only be used as an ace
or to complete a straight or flush. It
cannot be used as a true wild card,
for example, as a queen to make QQ43X
play as three queens. When playing for
low, the joker becomes the lowest rank
not already held, so 864AX is played
as 8642A, with the joker used as a
deuce.
Although true wild cards
are rarely seen in a casino, they are
a popular way to add excitement to a
home game. Wild cards introduce an
additional hand, five of a kind, which
normally ranks above a straight flush.
They can also cause confusion when two
players hold the same hand composed of
different wild card combinations. The
standard rules of poker do not
distinguish between such hands, but
some players prefer to rank hands
using fewer wild cards above less
"natural" versions of the same
hand.
|