Texas Holdem
Hand Rankings
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Hand
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Description
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Example
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Royal Straight Flush
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This is the daddy of all hands and even if you
play often, you will rarely see one. It's similar to
a hole in one in golf. It is made of up all of the same
suite, ten through Ace. It is a straight and a flush
and the royal part comes from it being made up of the highest
cards too.
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As Ks Qs Js Ts
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Straight Flush
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While not as magical as
the royal straight flush, the straight flush still is a rariety.
It is made up of 5 cards of the same suite ranked in
succession. For example 6-10, or A-5 (Ace can play both
high and low in straights).
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Jc, Tc, 9c, 8c, 7c
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Four Of A Kind
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This is self-explanatory. A four of a
kind ocurrs when you have all the cards of one type.
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Ks, Kd, Kc, Kh
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Full House
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A full house happens when
you have both three of a kind and also a pair. To determine
if one full house higher ranked then another, first look at
the three cards of the same kind. The one that is larger
wins. If they both are the same then you'll have to
compare the two cards.
For example:
Jacks full of fours (JJJ, 44)
beats
9s full of Aces (999, AA)
Jacks full of tens (JJJ,
TT)
beats
Jacks full of nines (JJJ, 99)
Full houses in Texas Holdem
are nice hands and you will most likely see someone show one
down everytime you play.
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Jc, Jd, Jh, 9c, 9h
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Flush
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A flush occurs when you have five of the same
suite. If the cards were also in succession (like a straight),
then it would be a straight flush. To determine which
flush wins if there are more then one in a hand, then the
person with the highest card in their hand wins. In
the example to the right, the person has a ten high flush.
This would beat someone with a nine high flush and below.
Flushes are pretty common in Texas Holdem.
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Th, 8h, 4h, 3h, 2h
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Straight
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A straight occurs when
a player has five cards in ranked succession. Note that
an Ace can play both as a high card or a low card. Note
the two examples to the right. Straights are also very common
in Texas Holdem.
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Ah, Kc, Qd, Jd, Th
Ah, 2c, 3h, 4h, 5c
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Three Of A Kind
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Three of a kind is a nice hand. There
are two different names for three of a kind hands and it depends
on whether you have two of them on the board, or a pair in
your hand. They both rank the same but to be a savy
player you should know the difference. If you have a
pocket pair and hit one on the flop then it is called a "set".
If you have two cards on the flop and only one
in your hand then it is called three of a kind.
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8h, 8d, 8c, 9d, Ad
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Two Pair
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Two pair is when your
best five cards create a pair twice. That seems easy
enough right? When comparing two hands both with two pair
then the larger one always wins.
For example:
AA 22 would beat KK JJ
88 33 would beat 77 66
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Kh, Kd, Qh, Qd, 3c
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One Pair
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One pair is the hand you'll be getting the most
and trying to win with the most. Top pair is usually
the hand you'll be betting and trying to win some pots with.
When more then one person has the same pair, then the
"kickers" come in to play. Remember Texas Holdem uses
the best five cards so the following is true:
Ah, Ac, Jc, 6d, 4d
would lose to
Ad, As, Jd, 6c, 5d
Notice how the 5 beats the 4 (best five cards makes a hand).
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Kh, Kd, 8j, 6d, 5c
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High Card
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The high card hand is
the lowest non pair hand. Sometimes Ace high can win,
but in the low limit games it is very rare. In the example
to the right, the high card is K. So you would have
"king high". You would beat someone if they had "queen high"
or below but even a pair of deuces would beat you!
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Kh, Tc, 4c, 3d, 2h
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