poker
Poker | About Us | Poker Archive | Poker Guide | Poker Annals | Site Map | Contact Us

A Good Hand in Poker

The probability for a five card poker hand begins with the proposition... 52 cards taken 5 at a time. Expressed mathematically that is (5215)! The math looks like this;

52*51*50*49*48
------------------------------ =2,598,960
5*4*3*2*1

There are 2,598,960 possible five card hands that can be dealt in a five card game. This means that the odds of being dealt a Royal Flush in Spades, (10, 1, Q, K, A) is I in 2,598,960. Understand that this also means the odds of being dealt “Any” called for five card hand is the same I in 2,598,960. Being dealt the 5d, 6c, As, I Oh, 9h in the first five cards is the same as the Royal Flush in Spades. Given that there are four (4) different suits that the Royal Flush could be made in, the correct odds for any Royal Flush in the first five cards is;

2,598,960 ./. 4 — 649,740 to 1

Similar calculations can be made for each of the other hand types. Take for instance the odds of being dealt a flush (five cards of the same suit...not in order). There are 13 cards in each suit. You need five of the thirteen cards In the first five dealt, to make a flush. The math looks like this;

13*12*11*10*9
--------------------- ‘= 1287 x 4 suits = 5148
5 * 4 * 3 * 2 * 1

The number above, however includes all Flushes.. .Royal Flushes and Straight Flushes as well.

You must now subtract the number of Royal and Straight Flushes to determine the accurate count for a standard flush.
5148
- 4...Royal Flushes
- 36. .Straight Flushes
----------
5108...... ..,......., . F1ushs

 
Poker Strategies | Seven Card Stud | Progressive Calculation | Video Poker Rules | Poker Pro | Holdem Concepts

Poker Rules for online poker video

Three Strategies

It’s important to point out that the particular four-card draw was handicapped because the suited Ten was discarded. Normally a four-card draw to a Jack returns about 48%, depending on the ranks and suits of the discards.So...

Video Poker Rule #1:

Never draw four if you can draw three to a Royal.Forget about drawing two to the Flush. That’s a real loser. The question is, should you draw two cards or three cards in this case? If you drew two, which cards would you keep? The answer is keep the Queen and Jack because the Straight opportunities for King and Queen are fewer (because it’s more dead-ended on the high side) poker - video poker calculation.

(By the way, for the above reason, a four-card draw to a Jack is slightly better than a four-card draw to a Queen. And Kings and Aces are still worse—though equally so.)

It happens that the answer to the previous problem is to draw only two. That returns 51% as compared to 49% for a three-card draw.

Video Poker Rule #2:

Don’t break a Flush to draw one to a Straight Rush.The pat hand is already worth a 500°lo return. That is, your original $1.25 and an additional $5.00. So right now you’re getting back $6.25. How much comes back if you draw?

Video Poker Rule #3:

Never break a Straight to draw to a Straight Flush.Of course, a video poker machine does not consider a Royal Flush to be the same thing as a Straight Flush. If it’s a Royal we’re taking about, then that’s completely different. In fact...

Video Poker Rule #4 :

Always break a Flush to draw to a Royal.Video Poker Rule #5: Always break a Straight to draw to a Royal. These last two rules imply something so obvious I won’t bother to make a rule out of it: Always break a pair to draw to a Royal poker - a famous personality

Video Poker Rule #6:

Always break anything to draw to a Royal (This assumes the jackpot is David’s minimum $3000 or higher for a quarter machine.)

Video Poker Rule #7:

Never draw five f you have any cardlarger than a Ten.Remember Andrew at the beginning of this article? He violated this rule and look where it got him. (He made a Straight!) Well, it’s right in the long run, I promise.

Video Poker Rule #8:

Don’t keep a Ten for a four-card draw. These rules and the related advice given are not intended to cover all aspects of video online poker. A discussion of each dilemma you’re apt to face would require a book-length volume. Some research is still not complete.

 

  Poker | About Us | Poker Archive | Poker Guide | Poker Annals | Site Map | Contact Us
copyright © www.pokeronlineplay.co.uk  
  Valid XHTML 1.0 Strict