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Poker (Pocker) RulesPoker
is a simple game with various versions such as Five-card draw poker, Stud Poker
and Community poker. The general game of Pocker (Five card draw) is played
with a standard deck of fifty-two playing cards. Cards are ranked from high to
low in the following order: ACE, KING, QUEEN, JACK, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2.
ACES are worth more than KINGS which are worth more than QUEENS, which are worth
more than JACKS etc, etc. The cards are separated into four suits, which are SPADES,
CLUBS, HEARTS and DIAMONDS. The object of the game is to get the highest-valued
hand, ranked as follows: - ROYAL FLUSH - Same suit; A-K-Q-J-10.
- FIVE
OF A KIND - Four cards of the same denomination plus a joker.
- STRAIGHT FLUSH
- Any five card suit in the same sequence.
- FOUR OF A KIND - Four cards of
the same index.
- FULL HOUSE - Three of a kind combined with a pair.
- FLUSH
- Any five cards of same suit but not in sequence.
- STRAIGHT - Five cards in
sequence but not of the same suit.
- THREE OF A KIND - Three cards of the same
index.
- TWO PAIR - Two separate pairs.
- ONE PAIR - Two cards of the same
index.
- HIGH CARD - Highest card in your hand.
Poker hand rankings
are a function of probability, the more rare the hand the more valuable it is.
Before the game begins, players must decide on the betting limit and if you are
playing on-line then you will want to choose a betting limit that you can afford.
The basic rules are as follows: Each player places an ante or "token bet"
into the kitty before the cards dealt. The ante can be any amount. You need an
ante because it guarantees that someone will always win something on each hand.
Once everyone has paid their ante, the dealer deals cards face down around the
table, starting at the player to his left and continuing clockwise. The dealer
always deals to himself last and then deals everyone a first card, then goes back
around the circle to deal the second card, and so forth. When everyone has five
cards, the remainder of the deck is placed in the middle of the table, and game
begins. Each player looks at their cards without letting anyone else see
them, then the first player places a bet. Whilst there are various ways of deciding
who bets first, poker beginners are better off by allowing the player directly
to the left of the dealer place the first bet. Then to the next hand, the person
to his left will bet first and so on around the table for each new hand. Pocker
players have several options as far as the first round of betting goes. If no
one has made a bet yet, you have two choices: (OPEN & CHECK) OPEN:
If no betting has been done when your turn comes, you may "open" the kitty. This
allows you to make the first bet (any amount up to the betting limit). CHECK:
The opportunity to "check" only occurs if no one has opened the betting round
and then it is time for you to decide what to do. When a player checks, it means
that they do not want to open the betting, but at the same time they don't want
to quit either. If someone opens the betting you now have three choices: (SEE,
RAISE, and FOLD) SEE: When you "see" another player it means that
you match their bet. So whatever the other player bets and you still want to stay
in the game, however you have to "see" their bet by placing the same amount into
the kitty. RAISE: When you "raise" it requires you to first "see"
the previous bet, and then increase the bet. If the previous person bet a R1 and
you want to bet more than that, you must then say "I see (match) your $/£, and
raise you (increase the bet) another $/£". FOLD: When someone else
opens, you can cut your losses and fold your cards. When you "fold" you "give
up" and place your cards face down on the table, and loose whatever you have bet
so far. You only "fold" when you think your hand is too weak to compete against
the other players. All the players who have not folded their cards are then
allowed to replace them with new cards. A player is allowed to get rid of up to
three unwanted cards and receive up to three new cards from the deck (the player
must always have five cards in total). No one sees what anyone has discarded or
drew. All cards a placed face down. After each player has replaced their
hand with new cards, the betting begins. You now have the option of opening or
checking, and once someone has opened, you may see, raise, or fold. The game ends
when there are no more raises or everyone has folded except for the winner. Everyone
now has to turn their cards over and see how where they stand. The player with
the highest hand wins the pot. Poker is about psychology where you play
against your opponents. A small hand does not have to be the best hand possible,
it just has to be better than what all the other players are holding. The art
of good poker is learning and understanding your opponent's body language. Mastering
the psychology of poker is ability to observe how others play and using that experience
to judge how your opponents handle each hand. Making mental notes of how the player
bets whether it is strong or weak, and at showdown keep track of which player's
fold and which players bet. This way you will see whether a player bets strongly
on a weak hand and whether the hand would make it or not. Bluffing is a
skill that takes time to master and you will have to play thousands of hands to
gradually understand the concept. You will get a feeling for how players bet in
response to what they are holding in their hands. This is when you must focus
on how they respond to other players. The mathematical strategies that apply can
be of assistance especially in community and stud games, giving you information
about your opponents a poker psychology is best learned during these games as
you never know which cards have been discarded. It is also important to
adjust your strategy as you learn to identify which player is playing tight or
loose. If they are playing loose then they will bet heavily or stay in for a long
time even whilst holding a weak hand. Tight players tend to fold all the time
and they are categorized as passive or aggressive players. Each time a hand
is played another way from the way you would of played it and if you could see
your challenger's cards, they profit and every time you play your hand the same
way you would have played it and if you could see all their cards, they loose.
On the other hand, each time your challenger's plays their hands differently from
the way they would have if they could see all your cards, you profit and each
time they play their hands the same way they would have played it if they could
see all your cards, you loose. Every choice made in poker can be analysed
in terms of expected value, which expresses the standard payouts of a choice made
on frequently basis. The right choice to make is the choice that has the biggest
payout value but sometimes it is better to opt for the choice for a bigger goal
of enduring trickery. Should you be able to see all your challenger's cards then
you will always be able to analyse the correct choice with mathematical sureness.
The less you digress from the correct choices the better your long-term results
and this is the mathematic extraction of the Fundamental theorem. The most
vital goal in poker is to induce your challengers to make mistakes. The Fundamental
theorem of poker applies to all heads-up choices but does not apply to multi-way
decisions. As each challenger makes incorrect choices the 'combined choices' of
challengers works against the player. This situation happens mostly in loose-passive
games when a player is holding a strong hand but the other players are in pursuit
with draws. In this circumstance it is referred to as 'implicit collusion'. The
specialists disagree on the occurrence of implicit collusion in certain games
as well as the level to which implicit collusion might be unprincipled. The Fundamental
theorem of poker is expressed and seems self-evident yet its correct use to the
numerous probable situations that a poker player may face which needs an immense
amount of expertise, wisdom and understanding. THE BUY
IN - Before entering a game a full buy-in must be made for that particular
game. A full buy-in at limit poker is ten times the maximum bet for the game being
played.
- A player that has been forced to move from a broken game has to move
game to game of the same limit and may continue to play for the same amount of
money, even if it's less than the minimum buy-in. When switching games one must
have the right buy-in size for each new game.
- You are allowed to make one
short buy-in per game. Adding to your stack is not considered a buy-in and can
be done in any amount between hands.
MISDEALS - The
dealer has exposed two or more cards.
- The first or second card of the hand
has been dealt face-up or shown in error by the dealer.
- An incorrect number
of cards have been dealt to player.
- Any card that has been dealt out of sequence.
- Two or more boxed cards are found.
- Two or more extra cars have been dealt
in the starting hands of the game.
- When a player has been dealt out that is
entitle to a hand. This player has to be present at the table or have a posted
blind or ante.
- The first card that is dealt to the wrong position.
- Cards
that have been dealt to an empty seat or a player that is not entitled to a hand.
DEAD
HANDS - When you announce that you are folding or facing a bet or a
raise.
- In stud games, when facing a bet and pick your face-up cards off the
table or turn your face-up cards face-down or mix your up-cards and down-cards
together.
- When you throw your hand away in a forward motion causing other
players to act behind you.
- When you act on a hand with a joker as a hole card
in a game not using a joker.
BETTING AND RAISING
- Check-raise is permitted in all games except in some forms of lowball.
- In
limit poker when a pot involves three or more players who are not all-in then
a game with three or more betting rounds allows a maximum of a bet and three raises
or a game with two betting rounds allows a maximum of a bet and four raises.
- In
no-limit and pot-limit, unlimited raising is allowed.
- Unlimited raising is
allowed in heads-up play. This applies when an action becomes heads-up before
the raising has been capped. Once raising is capped on the betting round another
fold that leaves two players heads-up may uncap it.
- In limit play, all-in
bets or less than half a bet does no reopen the betting for any player who already
acted and is in the pot for all previous bets. A player that faces less than half
a bet may fold, call or complete the wager.
- Any bet must be the size of the
previous bet or raise in that round unless a player is going all-in.
- The smallest
chip that is wagered in a game is used in the antes, rake, collection or blinds.
- A verbal statement shows your action and is binding.
- Rapping the table
with your hand is a pass.
- Acting out of turn is no allowed and a player who
checks out of turn may not bet or raise on the next turn to act.
- In order
to retain the right to act a player gas to stop the action by calling 'time'.
Failure to do so before three or more players have acted behind you may cause
you to loose the right to act. You may forfeit your right to act when the player
in front of you has not acted and only if you fail to act when it is your turn.
Should you wait for someone's turn to come before you and three or more player's
act behind you, this does not stop your right to act.
- When you make a forward
motion in limit poker with chips and cause another player to act then you may
be forced to complete your action.
- A player who bets and calls by releasing
chips into the pot is bound by that action. Should you be unaware that the pot
has been raised you have the right to withdraw that money and reconsider your
action provided that no one else has acted after you.
- String raises are not
permitted.
- All wagers and calls of an improper low amount have to be brought
up to proper size.
- If you have a single chip in the pot that is larger than
the bet but did not announce a raise then you are assumed to have only called.
THE
SHOWDOWN - A player must show all cards in the hand face-up on the
table to win any part of the winnings.
- Cards read for themselves and the dealer
assists in reading them but it is the player's responsibility for holding onto
their cards until the winner is declared.
- Any floor person, player or dealer
who sees an incorrect amount of chips placed into the pot is obliged to point
out the error.
- The dealer will kill loosing hands before the pot is awarded.
- Any player may request to see any hand that has been called. If a player other
than the winner asks to see a hand that has been folded, that hand is dead. If
the winner asks to see a loosing player's hand then both hands are live and best
hand wins all.
- Should you show your cards to another player during or after
a deal any other player at the table also has the right to see those exposed cards.
- On the final betting round and everyone is all-in, the player who acts first
is the first to show the hand. If there is betting on the final round then the
last player has to take action by a bet or raise in the first to show the hand.
TIES - The ranking of suits from highest to lowest
in spades, hearts, clubs and Diamonds. Suits never break a tie for winning a pot
and only used to break a tie between cards of the same rank.
- Dealing cards
to each player is used to determine things like who moves to another table or
seating order. When the cards are dealt the order is clockwise starting with the
first player on the dealer's left hand side.
- An odd chip will be broken down
to the smallest unit used in the game. No player may receive more than one odd
chip
Pacific Poker : Poker Rules : Pocker Rules |