Poker Hand Precedence

Poker Hand Precedence Rating: 8,6/10 3186 reviews

Last modified : 01 Nov 2006
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John McLeod supplied the following answer:

Depending on the respective chip stacks of the players, a number of side pots may be created in a single poker hand each time a subsequent player is all-in. For example, assume there are three players: A, B, and C, who have $100, $120, and $200, respectively, at the beginning of the hand. When you don't set a limit for the straddle bet in no-limit poker games, you risk turning the hands into a luck-based lottery. Takes precedence over the under-the-gun straddle, and the dealer. POKER ETIQUETTE The following actions are improper, and grounds for warning, suspending, or barring a violator: Deliberately acting out of turn. Deliberately splashing chips into the pot. Agreeing to check a hand out when a third player is all-in. Reading a hand for another player at the showdown before it has been placed faceup on the table.

Precedence

I will assume for the moment that we are talking about French suits (hearts, clubs, diamonds, spades).

The short answer is: 'it depends what game you are playing'. The longer answer would be a list of the different ways that the suits are ranked in different games. Here are a few off the top of my head (rank from high to low in each case):

hearts, diamonds, clubs, spades: Preference, 500, Tysiacha
clubs, spades, hearts, diamonds: Skat, Doppelkopf, Sheepshead
spades, hearts, clubs, diamonds: Big Two (Choi Dai Di, Da Lao Er)
diamonds, hearts, spades, clubs: Pusoy Dos
clubs, hearts, spades, diamonds: Ninety-nine
spades, hearts, diamonds, clubs: Contract Bridge

People sometimes ask this question about ranking of suits because they want to decide which of two royal flushes is higher in poker. In that case, the correct answer (for the official casino / tournament game) is that in poker all the suits are equal, and that when such a tie occurs you split the pot. But some people do play with suits ranked as a house rule and several different rankings are used. See http://www.pagat.com/vying/pokerrank.html for a discussion of this.

In a way, a more interesting question would be to ask how many of the 24 possible different suit ranking orders occur in some card game.

The answer to the question 'How are the cards within a suit ranked?' is similar. It could be K-Q-J-A-2-3-4-5-6-7 or K-Q-J-A-10-9-8-7-... or A-10-K-Q-J-9-8-7 or K-Q-J-10-9-8-7-... or even A-K-Q-J-10-9-8-... depending on the game and the suit.

The question is a bit easier for other suit systems. For example, in Chinese money cards the ranking order from high to low is definitely: tens, myriads, strings, cash.

Poker Hand Order Of Precedence

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