All Texas Hold'em games that are offered at betandwin Poker
Lounge are "fixed" limit games. The object is to create
the best five-card hand using seven cards.
Before the Deal:
Players will buy-in for the posted amount.
Selected players will post blinds.
The Dealer Button:
Unlike Seven Card Stud where the dealer deals each opening
round clockwise around the table starting with the player closest
to the left, the dealer in Hold'em will start to deal each game
contingent upon which player has the "button." The
button is a graphical representation ("D") of which
player is the "dealer." Although our dealer will be
dealing the Hold'em game, the player who has the button placed
in front of his seat gets to play his cards as if he were the
actual dealer. When the cards are dealt to players, they are
dealt in a manner as if the player was actually dealing in a
live environment.
Blinds:
Because we have a player "on the button" we now ask
two players via a specific voice announcement (just those players
will hear the announcement) to "post the large or small
blinds please." The blinds serve a purpose similar to antes,
in that they put forced money into the pot that gives players
an incentive to enter the hand. However, only two players will
"post" or "put up" the blinds.
The first blind is called the "small blind". This
bet is usually half the minimum bet of the game, although in
some games, the fraction is slightly different. In $15-30, the
small blind is $7, and in $5-10, the small blind is $2.
So, in a $2-4 game the small blind will be $1. The second blind
is called the "large blind" and is always the same
size as the game's minimum bet, e.g. in a 5-10 game, the large
blind is $5.
The player directly left of the button will have the "small
blind." The player directly to the left of the small blind
will have the "large blind" of the full amount or
the lowest game limit.
Opening Deal:
Now that we have a Button and small and large blinds, we are
ready to deal. The dealer always deals from the player closest
to the dealer's left. Moving clockwise around the table, the
game will "deal-in" each player. The players will
be dealt one card face down, then a second card face down. A
round of betting will occur starting with the player seated
to the left of the large blind.
Betting on Opening Deal:
The player seated to the left of the large blind will always
have the action on the opening deal. This player may not check,
but rather can only fold, call, or raise the amount of the large
blind.
The game will now advance to each player seated asking to fold,
call, or raise until we reach the large blind for an action
decision. If no one has raised by the time the play comes back
around to the large blind, the large blind has the option to
"check" his own BLIND wager or raise.
Once all players have completed the first round of wagering,
they will proceed to the flop.
Flop:
The next cards to be dealt into the game will be the third,
fourth and fifth cards in the game. These three cards will not
be dealt to each player, but rather placed face up in the center
of the table.
But before we "flop" anything, we must burn a card.
The dealer will deal face down one card into the pot. After
the burn card, the dealer will deal three cards face up in the
center of the poker table. These three cards are called "community
cards" which are available to all players for potential
use to make a poker hand. The area in which these cards lie
on the table is commonly referred to as the "board".
The look of the flop:
Now the flop has landed on the "board" and all players
now have five cards available to make their hand, the two "hole"
cards that were dealt on the opening round and now three "community
cards" which all players may use. The rule of the determination
of the action is as follows.
After the opening deal, the player who is seated closest to
the left of the button shall have the initial action for the
remainder of the game. If the player who has the button folds,
then the button is still active and will remain in front of
that player's seat to keep position a constant throughout that
game.
The player that has the action may check or bet. As soon as
one player chooses to bet, then the other players in the hand
can no longer check; they can only fold, call or raise the amount
that is proper for that round (the lower betting limit on the
first round and on the flop, and the higher betting limit on
the turn and the river).
The Turn:
The "turn" is the fourth card to be dealt onto the
board and the sixth card available to the player. Some players
call this "fourth street." However, the most common
term used for this round is the "turn". As always,
the dealer will burn a card and then deal one card face up onto
the board to the right of the last flop card.
The look of the turn:
The Nine of spades is the "turn card"
At this point the players have access to the four cards on
the board and their two hole cards. The game will now declare
who has the action, which always begins with the player still
remaining in the hand which is closest to the left of the button.
The bet on the turn is the higher level of the betting limit.
In a $2-4 game, this would be $4. All raise will be in $4 increments
with a cap of three raises. If there are just two players remaining,
the number of raises is unlimited on our real money tables.
However, in tournament play, the three-raise limit applies
even if there are only two players left in a hand.
The River:
The dealer will then place the fifth and final card on the
board.
The Flop Cards turn River.
River Look:
At this point, five cards are on the board and two hole cards
are in the players' hands. The action again starts with the
first player still remaining in the hand which is closest to
the left of the button. All checks, bets, raises, and folds
will be completed and then a showdown will begin.
Who shows first?
To determine which players' cards will and must be shown first
will lie with the player who had initiated the action or with
the player who had initiated the last bet, raise or re-raise.
This simply means that whoever had the last action on the river
must show his/her cards first.
Suppose a Player wins by default?
A player who has a winning hand does not have to show his/her
cards if his/her bet was not called.
Do Players have to show their Cards if they call a
bet on the River?
Players are not required to show their cards if, and only if,
they are not the player who had the last action. If a player
calls a bet and sees that he/she cannot win, he/she may fold
his/her cards. Players who are curious about the folded hand
may request a hand history to learn it.
Who wins?
In our poker room, as with all, "cards speak." This
means our dealer will find the best five-card hand using the
five (5) community cards on the board and the two (2) pocket
cards in the player's hand. The winner will be decided based
on the universal poker hand rankings.