The Rules of Poker

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The Rules of Poker

(The original version of this page was written by Jerry Cooley.)

Poker is a game of chance. However, when you introduce the concept of betting, poker gains quite a bit of
skill and psychology. (This isn't to say that there isn't skill at poker when nothing is at risk, there just isn't
nearly as much). This is meant as a very basic primer into the rules of poker, for more information, get a book
on the game (or start playing with a group of people who know how. It's more expensive than reading a book,
but the group won't mind!).

A very detailed set of rules covering playing procedure, how to deal with irregularities, and so on, can be
found on Bob Ciaffone's web site. He provides comprehensive rules for card rooms and for home games. Joe
Smith has published a web-friendly version of these rules.

This list is currently broken into several parts:

The Very Basics


How the Hands are Ranked
Descriptions of Hand Ranks
Betting
An Example 5-Card Draw Hand
Poker Terms

The Very Basics


Poker is played with a standard pack of 52 cards. (Some variant games use multiple packs or add a few cards
called jokers.) The cards are ranked (from high to low) Ace, King, Queen, Jack, 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, Ace.
(Ace can be high or low, but is usually high). There are four suits (spades, hearts, diamonds and clubs);
however, no suit is higher than another. All poker hands contain five cards, the highest hand wins.

Some games have Wild Cards, which can take on whatever suit and rank their possessor desires. Sometimes
jokers will be used as wild cards, other times, the game will specify which cards are wild (deuces, one-eyed
jacks, or whatever).

How the hands are ranked


Hands are ranked as follows (from high to low):

Five of a Kind
Straight Flush
Four of a Kind
Full House

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Flush
Straight
Three of a Kind
Two Pair
Pair
High Card

Descriptions of Hand Ranks

Five of a Kind

A five of a kind (which is only possible when using wild cards) is the highest possible hand. If more than one
hand has five of a kind, the higher card wins (Five Aces beats five kings, which beat five queens, and so on).

Straight Flush

A straight flush is the best natural hand. A straight flush is a straight (5 cards in order, such as 5-6-7-8-9) that
are all of the same suit. As in a regular straight, you can have an ace either high (A-K-Q-J-T) or low
(5-4-3-2-1). However, a straight may not 'wraparound'. (Such as K-A-2-3-4, which is not a straight). An Ace
high straight-flush is called a Royal Flush and is the highest natural hand.

Four of a Kind

Four of a kind is simply four cards of the same rank. If there are two or more hands that qualify, the hand
with the higher-rank four of a kind wins. In games with wild cards, it is possible for two players to have four
of a kind of the same rank, and in this case the one with the high card outside the four of the kind wins. The
same can happen in games with community cards, such as Texas Hold'em, when the shared cards on the table
include four of a kind. General Rule: When hands tie on the rank of a pair, three of a kind, etc, the cards
outside break ties following the High Card rules.

Full House

A full house is a three of a kind and a pair, such as K-K-K-5-5. Ties are broken first by the three of a kind,
then pair. So K-K-K-2-2 beats Q-Q-Q-A-A, which beats Q-Q-Q-J-J. (Obviously, the three of a kind can only
be similar if wild cards or community cards are in use.)

Flush

A flush is a hand where all of the cards are the same suit, such as J-8-5-3-2, all of spades. When flushes ties,
follow the rules for High Card.

Straight

A straight is 5 cards in order, such as 4-5-6-7-8. An ace may either be high (A-K-Q-J-T) or low (5-4-3-2-1).
However, a straight may not 'wrap around' (such as Q-K-A-2-3, which is not a straight). When straights tie,
the highest straight wins. (AKQJT beats KQJT9 down to 5432A). If two straights have the same value
(AKQJT vs AKQJT) they split the pot.

Three of a Kind

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Three cards of the same rank, together with two cards of different ranks (otherwise it would be a Full House).
Again, highest three of a kind wins. If both are the same rank (possible with wild or community cards), then
compare the High Cards.

Two Pair

This is two distinct pairs of card and a 5th card. The highest pair wins ties. If both hands have the same high
pair, the second pair wins. If both hands have the same pairs, the high card wins.

Pair

Two cards of the same rank (a pair) plus three cards of different ranks. The higher pair wins; if two players
have pairs of the same rank the highest of the other three cards are compared.

High Card

This is any hand which doesn't qualify as any one of the above hands. If nobody has a pair or better, then the
highest card wins. If multiple people tie for the highest card, they look at the second highest, then the third
highest etc. High card is also used to break ties when the high hands both have the same type of hand (pair,
flush, straight, etc).

Betting
So, how do you bet? Poker is, after all, a gambling game. In most games, you must 'ante' something (amount
varies by game, our games are typically a nickel), just to get dealt cards. After that players bet into the pot in
the middle. At the end of the hand, the highest hand (that hasn't folded) wins the pot. Basically, when betting
gets around to you (betting is typically done in clockwise order), you have one of three choices:

Call
When you call, you bet enough to match what has been bet since the last time you bet (for instance, if
you bet a dime last time, and someone else bet a quarter, you would owe fifteen cents).
Raise
When you raise, you first bet enough to match what has been bet since the last time you bet (as in
calling), then you 'raise' the bet another amount (up to you, but there is typically a limit.) Continuing the
above example, if you had bet a dime, the other person raised you fifteen cents (up to a quarter), you
might raise a quarter (up to fifty cents). Since you owed the pot 15 cents for calling and 25 for your
raise, you would put 40 cents into the pot.
Fold
When you fold, you drop out of the current hand (losing any possibility of winning the pot), but you
don't have to put any money into the pot.

Betting continues until everyone calls or folds after a raise or initial bet.

Some Standard Betting Rules

In the group I play in, we ante a nickel. The maximum first bet is fifty cents, and the maximum raise is fifty
cents. However, during one round of betting, raises may total no more than one dollar.

An Example Five Card Draw Hand.

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Five card draw is one of the most common types of poker hands. Each player is dealt five cards, then a round
of betting follows. Then each player may discard up to 3 cards (4 if your last card is an ace or wild card, in
some circles) and get back (from the deck) as many cards as he/she discarded. Then there is another round of
betting, and then hands are revealed (the showdown) and the highest hand wins the pot. So you are the dealer
at a five card draw game (against four other players, Alex, Brad, Charley and Dennis (seated in that order to
your left). Everyone puts a nickel into the pot (Ante) and you deal out 5 cards to each player.

You deal yourself a fairly good hand Ks-Kd-Jd-5c-3d. A pair of kings isn't bad off the deal (not great, but not
bad). Then the betting starts...

Alex 'Checks' (checking is basically calling when you don't owe anything to the pot).
Brad bets a dime.
Charley calls (and puts a dime into the pot).
Dennis raises a dime (and puts twenty cents into the pot).
Well, it's your turn. Twenty cents to you. You can fold, call or raise. Like I said before, pair of kings
isn't bad, not good but not bad. You call and put twenty cents into the pot.
Back to Alex, who grumbles and tosses his cards into the center of the table, folding. (Note, when
folding, never show your cards to anyone).
Brad calls. The total bet is twenty cents, but he had already bet a dime, so he owes a dime, which he
tosses into the pot.
Charley is in the same position as brad, and tosses a dime into the pot.

The round of betting is over. After Dennis's raise, everyone else folded or called (there weren't any raises) so,
everyone is all square with the pot. Now everyone can discard up to 3 cards. Brad discards 3 cards, Charley
discards one card, Dennis discards two cards. (You deal replacements to everyone) and now it's your turn.
You have a pair of kings, three spades, and no chance for a straight. It's best to just keep the two kings and
hope to get a 3rd or fourth king. You discard three cards, and your new hand is: Ks-Kd-Kc-4c-8h. Three
Kings! A nice little hand.

What do you suppose the others were trying for? Well, Brad kept two cards, so he probably had a pair (just
like you) but it probably wasn't aces, so even if brad got a three of a kind, you probably beat him. Charley
kept four cards, so he was probably trying for a straight or flush. (If Charley had four of a kind, he might have
bet much harder). The big problem is Dennis. He raised earlier, and only drew two cards. He might be
bluffing, but he could have had three of a kind off the deal... In any case, the second round of betting starts
(with dealers left).

Brad bets a nickel.


Charley folds (I guess he didn't get his straight or flush).
Dennis raises twenty cents (to a quarter total).
You call.
Brad looks at his cards, then calls (betting twenty cents).
Again, everyone called Dennis's raise, so the round of betting is over.

Well, the betting is over, everyone reveals his hand:

You had Ks-Kd-Kc-4c-8h.


Brad had Jh-Jd-3c-3s-Ah.
Dennis had Qh-Qs-Qd-As-7s.

Well, the highest hand is three of a kind, and the highest three of a kind is your three kings. You win!

Conclusion

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After this and an hour of play, you'll be right at home playing poker. (Maybe not very good, but right at
home). If you ever get bored with basic 5 card draw, look at the Poker Variants.

Poker Terms
All In: See 'Tapped Out'.

Betting Round: If any cards of players' hands are up, betting usually begins with whoever is showing the
highest hand. Some people play that in high/low games, the first round of betting starts with the lowest
showing hand and all later rounds start with the highest. If no cards are showing, the betting should start with
a different player each round, beginning with the player to the left of the dealer and rotating to the next player
clockwise each round. A round consists of a series of bets until everyone has called or folded.

Declare: Announcing whether you're trying for the high hand, low hand, or both. Typically, this is done by
secretly putting no chips in your hand if you're going low, one chip if you're going high, or two chips if you're
going both. Everyone then opens their fists simultaneously.

Down: Face down, so that the value of the card isn't showing. Also known as 'In The Hole'.

Exchange: Discard cards from a hand and replace them with different cards, usually from the top of the deck.

High/Low: The highest hand and the lowest hand split the pot. In many high/low games, it is possible to win
the entire pot by having the highest and the lowest hand (accomplished via wild cards, or by using different
sets of 5 cards), but only if you declare that you're trying for both. If you try for both but don't win both (that
is, someone else has the highest or the lowest hand), you win neither. When playing high/low, hands are
compared against all other hands, not just the hands which are going the same way. Thus, if someone going
high has a better low hand than all of the people going low, nobody going low wins (so the high hand gets the
whole pot). If someone goes for both and fails, say by winning high but losing low, the high half of the pot
goes to the low winner-- it doesn't go the second best high hand.

In The Hole: See 'Down'.

Natural: Without wild cards.

Perfect low: A perfect low is usually A-2-3-4-6. However, it can also be A-2-3-4-5 if you play that straights
don't count when you go low, or it can be 2-3-4-5-7 if you play that Aces are always high, or 2-3-4-5-6 if you
play both of the above.

Rank: Value of a card. There are 13 ranks in a deck of cards.

Roll: Flip a down card up.

Rolling Showdown: A showdown in which cards are stacked and revealed one at a time with a round of
betting after each card is revealed.

Rotating Bet: Each round of betting starts with the next player clockwise. Typically, the player to the left of
the dealer starts the first betting round. The 2nd round would thus be started by the player to his left, and so
forth.

Showdown: The process of revealing hands and determining the winner.

Tap Out: This happens whenever a player bets all of his or her remaining money. If only that player and one

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other are still playing the hand, then the remaining cards for the hand are dealt out and no more bets are
placed. If more than two players are still playing the hand, then a separate pot is created to hold the bets for
the players who are not 'Tapped Out'. Betting continues as normal for those other players in the new pot.
When the hand is over, if the player who tapped out wins, then that player gets the first pot and the player
with the second highest hand gets the second pot. If the player who tapped out does not win the hand, then
the winning player get both pots. Also known as 'All In'.

Trick: A set of cards, one card from each player, played one at a time in sequence around the table. Tricks
are usually found in games like Hearts and Bridge, not in true Poker games.

Trump: One suit which is stronger than other suits. The lowest ranking card of a trump suit beats the highest
ranking card of any other suit. Trump suits are used in trick-taking games and are not found in true Poker
games.

Up: Face up, so that the value of the card is showing.

Bugs: Jokers that can represent any card if it helps accomplish a straight or a flush, but represent only aces
(of any suit) if it goes towards some other kind of hand.

This page is maintained by John McLeod ([email protected]).


© Jerry Cooley, John McLeod, 2004

Last updated 6th July 2006

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