
Online Poker
Some poker games just don't fit neatly into the categories of draw poker
games, stud poker games or community poker card poker games, and some
have features of more than one of these categories.
Contents
1 Stud Horse poker
games
2 Oxford stud
3 Billabong (and Shanghai)
4 Guts
5 Blind Man's Bluff
Stud Horse poker game is mentioned in the
Though called "stud", this is a combination stud/community card
poker game that was popular at MIT in the 1960s, in which players of poker
games receive individual down poker cards, individual up poker cards, and
community poker cards. Many variations on this are possible by changing
what kinds of poker cards and how many are dealt in various rounds. One
difficulty with such a combination is deciding the betting order: in stud
poker games, the player with the best up poker cards showing bets first
in each round (except sometimes the first, where the worst up card is
forced to begin the betting with a Bring-in). In community poker games,
each betting of poker game begins with the same player (because there
generally are no up poker cards), making it more positional.
First, each player is dealt two down poker cards and one up poker card as
in seven-poker card stud, followed by a first betting round of the poker game.
Like stud, the poker game is usually played with a Bring-in, the lowest
up poker card being forced to pay it, and betting follows after that.
After the first round is complete, two community poker cards are dealt to
the table, followed by a second betting round, beginning with the player
with the highest- ranking incomplete poker game hand (as in stud) made
from his up poker card plus the two community poker cards. For example,
if one player has a K up poker card, and a second player has a 7 up poker
card, and the community poker cards are T-7 (T = 10), the second player
bets first (since he has a pair of 7s, and the other player only has
K-high). Then a second up poker card is dealt to each player of the poker
game, followed by a third betting round, again beginning with the player
who can make the best partial hand with his two up poker cards and the
board. Finally, a third community poker card is dealt to table, followed
by a fourth betting round and showdown of the poker game. Note that as
with
Just as
Guts is quite different from most other poker game games (in fact classifying
it as a poker game at all is somewhat questionable). Rather than the
customary rounds of betting followed by a single showdown, guts features
multiple rounds, each of which consist of the decision to be
"in" or "out", and each of which contains a showdown.
Only the players who stay "in" participate in the showdown of
the poker game. In the most common version, the player who stays in with
the best hand receives the current pot, while all other players who
stayed in must match the pot. (For example, if the pot is $5 and three
people stay in, then one player will receive the $5 pot and two players
will be forced to add $5 each to the pot, thus doubling it.) Then the
hand is re-dealt, and all players (even those who were "out" in
the last round) can participate again. The poker game ends when only a
single player has the guts to stay "in", and thus the pot is
taken without replenishment. Each player's hand usually consists of a
reduced poker game hand of either 2 or 3 poker cards. The poker cards are
ranked as in regular 5-poker card poker game, but in some variations straights
and flushes count and in some they do not.
Another variation of the poker game is for three-poker card guts. The
hands are ranked as follows: Three of a kind, straight flush, straight,
flush, pair. Each player receives two poker cards face down. In turn,
each player declares whether they're in or out. If they're in, they
receive their third poker card face up. The dealer declares last; if no
other player has stayed in, then the dealer must have a pair or better to
win the pot. Another variation is for the other players to have another
chance to declare and challenge the dealer. With this variation, there is
no requirement for the dealer's hand; if no one challenges him, the
dealer wins.
Declaring "in" or "out" is similar to declaring high
or low in high-low poker games. Each player takes a poker chip, places
their hands under the table, and either places the chip in one fist or
not. Each poker player then holds their closed fist above the table, and
the players of the poker game simultaneously open their hands to reveal
their decision (a chip represents "in", an empty hand
represents "out").
Because the pot can double (or more) each round, the stakes can grow
exponentially, and pots of 50 or 100 times the original ante are not
unheard of. There are many variations. Sometimes only the single player
with the worst hand (who stayed in) must add to the pot, but they must
double the pot rather than match it. In an especially vicious variation,
nobody wins the pot unless nobody else stays in. This can degenerate
quickly, when one player must add a large amount to the pot, and decides
to stay in until he wins it back. Thus the poker game continues
indefinitely, with one player continually adding larger and larger
amounts to the pot. The pot may grow so big that no player has enough
cash to match it, leading to arguments about how to end the poker game.
(This variation is not recommended when playing among friends. Often this
variation is abandoned after the first really big pot leads to conflict.)
One solution to the exponentially growing pots is to cap them at 50x or
100x the ante. That is, if there are 5 players with an ante of $1, the
pot started at $5. If there were 3 doublings, the pot is now at $40.
Suppose the "cap the pot at $50" rule were in force of the poker
game. Then, if another doubling occurred, each loser would pay $40, but
the pot would now be at $50 and the extra $30 would be set aside as the
ante once there's a hand with a winner and no loser.
Blind Man's Bluff is a version of poker game in which a player sees the poker
cards that would generally be visible to the other players, but does not
see his own. It can be played with just one poker card ("Indian Poker
game"), as a community poker card poker game, or as five-poker card
stud.
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