Friday, January 11, 2008

Pai Gow Poker Rules

Let’s larn some different type of poker other than Texas holdem, 7 card stud, 5 card draw and Omaha. Yes, pai gow poker. Now you must be wondering that pai gow sounds small Chinese; yes you are right this game is a mixture of the Chinese game pai gow and our very ain American poker. Definitely this is not one of the most popular word forms of poker but still widely played. It can be played by up to seven players.

It is played with one deck of 52 cards, plus a joker. Interestingly, jokester can be used only as an ace, or to finish a straight, a flush, a consecutive flush, or a royal flush. The of import thing here to retrieve is other than the usual ranking of hands we have got one more than winning manus that is “Five Aces” (five aces including the joker). Surprisingly, five aces beat all other hands including royal flush.

Each player is dealt seven cards. The cards are arranged to do two hands; a two card manus and a five card hand. The five card manus must rank higher or be equal to the two card hand. Finally both of your hands must rank higher than both of your oppositions hands (both five and two card hands). Further the two card manus can only have got two combinations; one brace and high card.

After the cards are arranged in to two hands, they are placed on the table face down. Once you set them down, you can no longer touch them. The trader will turn over his cards and do his hands. Each players manus is compared to the dealer’s hands. If the player wins 1 manus and loses the other, this is known as “push” and no money is exchanged. If trader wins both hands then he/she wins the players interest and frailty versa. Now what if there is a tie, the lone advantage with the trader here is he/she wins all ties.

After the manus is played, the adjacent individual clock-wise goes the trader and the adjacent manus is played. The major disadvantage to this game is that there is no accomplishment involved and you trust too much on luck. Also the likelihood are mediocre compared to playing with a pot.

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