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Here's where you can learn how to play, how to bet, and what wins. You can even learn the
lingo!
The Games
Order of Bets
Rank of Hands
Glossary
The Games
Poker is a card game where two to ten people sit around a table, deal cards from a deck of
52, and place bets that accumulate into a pot as the game progresses. The best poker hand
wins the pot.
Below are detailed rules and descriptions of how to play the three games of poker offered at
True Poker. If you'd like an animated tutorial, you can download True Poker -- it's free! Just
log on and watch live games. The built-in hints feature will tell you what's happening at each
event.
The three games currently offered by True Poker are:
1. Texas Hold'em Poker
2. Omaha Poker
3. Omaha Poker Hi/Low Games
These are the games most commonly found in card rooms around the world. All three are
quite similar in concept and easy to grasp, but each demands a very different strategy. That
part's up to you.
Texas Hold'em is the base from which the other three are derived. Below is a detailed
description of Texas Hold'em, followed by explanations of the other games.
1. Texas Hold'em Poker: Rules and Description
Sit down
Up to 10 players plus a dealer are seated around a table.
Dealer Button
In front of one of the players is a round disk or button. This dealer button determines the order
of betting (explained later) and moves to the left one player at a time, after each hand.
Post Blinds
Before the cards are dealt at the beginning of each hand, the two players directly to the left of
the dealer button must post "blinds". To post a blind is to place a bet before getting cards. The
player to the immediate left of the dealer button posts the "small blind," equal to half of the
minimum bet (e.g. $5 for a 10-20 game). The player to the left of the small blind posts the "big
blind," equal to the amount of the minimum bet (e.g. $10 for a 10-20 game).
Pocket Cards
Once the blinds have been posted, the first round of cards are dealt. These consist of two
cards face down to each player and are called the "pocket" cards. Each player can see their
own pocket cards. Then the first round of betting takes place, beginning with the player
immediately to the left of the big blind and continuing in a clockwise direction around the
table.

Betting
Bet amounts are fixed by the table stakes. For example, in a 3/6 table, bets are $3 in the first
two rounds and $6 in the last two. The bet amount can climb a maximum of 3 times in each
round of betting. In other words, there can be one bet and three raises in each round.
The Flop Cards
Next, three cards are dealt face up in the middle of the table. These cards are called the
"Flop". All three cards are "community" cards and can be used by all the players at the table
to make up their hand.
After the flop is dealt, a second round of betting takes place -- again, beginning with the
player immediately to the left of the dealer button. (All subsequent rounds of betting begin
with the player to left of the dealer button).
The Turn Card
Following this, a fourth "community" card is dealt face up in the middle of the table. This card
is called the "Turn card" and can also be used by all players. It is followed by a third round of
betting.
The River Card
Finally, a fifth and final "community" card is dealt face up in the middle of the table. It is called
the "River card" and is followed by a fourth and final round of betting.
Showdown
Once all betting is complete, players determine the best five-card hand that they can make
using any combination of their "pocket" cards and the "community" cards. The player with the
best five-card poker hand wins the pot.
Start again!
After a hand is completed and the pot taken by the winner, the dealer button is moved one
player to the left, and the next hand begins.
2. Omaha Poker: Rules and Description
Omaha poker follows the same sequence as Texas Hold'em poker, but with two differences:
a) players are dealt four "pocket" cards instead of two; and b) players must use two "pocket"
cards and three "community" cards to make your best hand.
3. Omaha Hi/Low Games: Rules and Description
Hi/Low Omaha plays the same as regular Omaha, except that there is an additional way to
win a share of the pot.
As in a regular game of Omaha, the Hi winner has the best poker hand. There is always a Hi
winner. But, in addition to a Hi winner, there can be a Low winner. The Low winner has 5
different cards below a 9. For example, if between your two pocket and three community
cards, you had a hand consisting of a 2, 3, 5, 7 and 8 of mixed suits, you would have a Low
hand and be entitled to a share of the pot. Your share depends on how many other players
won. And, there may not be a Low winner every hand.
TOP

Order of Bets
First to Act

Each round of betting begins with the player to the left of the dealer button (the small blind)
and proceeds around the table in a clockwise fashion, ending with the player at the dealer
button. (One exception to this is the opening round of betting, which begins with the player to
the left of the big blind.) At each turn, a player chooses between the following options: check,
call, bet, raise (if a bet has already been made), or fold.
Check
If no one has bet previously in the round, a player may simply "check," which means he does
not wish to bet or fold. Instead of betting, he wishes to let his turn pass without adding any
bets to the pot.
Call
If a bet has already been made in the round, a player can no longer check. He now must
either call the amount previously bet, raise, or fold. If he calls, he is matching the previous bet.
If he does not wish to match the bet, he must fold.
Fold
If a bet has been made previously in the round, and the player does not wish to at least match
the bet to stay in the hand, he must fold. To fold means to withdraw from the remainder of the
hand and forfeit all amounts invested in the pot up to that time.
Bet or Raise
If a player wishes to increase the amount of the pot, he bets or raises. The first time the pot is
raised in a given round, it is called a bet. The second time, it is called a raise, and all
subsequent times are called re-raises. The amount that a player can bet, raise or re-raise is
determined by the game limits. For example, in a 10-20 limit poker game, players can bet or
raise $10 in the first two rounds of betting and can bet or raise $20 in the last two rounds of
betting. The maximum number of times a pot can be raised in a given round of betting is
three. This means that up to, but not more than, four bets (including the initial bet) can be
made in a given round.
Sit out
Sitting out is the act of choosing not to participate in a hand of poker while remaining seated
at the table. Players who sit out and miss the blinds, must post both blinds to rejoin the game.
Players missing two rounds of the blind (two circuits of the Dealer button) are removed from
the table to free their seat for other players.
TOP

Rank of Hands
From strongest to weakest hand.
Royal Flush
Straight flush to the ace.
Straight Flush
Straight with all five cards the same suit.
Four of a Kind
Four cards of the same value.
Full House
Three cards of one value together with two cards of another value. When more than one full
house is competing, the one with the highest ranking group of three wins.
Flush
Five cards of the same suit. When more than one flush is competing, the one with the highest

card wins.
Straight
Five cards in sequence (e.g. 9,10, J, Q, K). When more than one straight is competing, the
one with the highest card wins. An ace can be taken as either high or low (but not both high
and low in the same hand).
Three of a Kind
Three cards of the same value.
Two Pair
Any two cards of one value together with two cards of another value. When more than one
hand has two pairs of the same rank, the hand with the highest card outside the paired cards
wins. This also applies to hands of one pair.
One Pair
Two cards of the same value.
Highest Card
When players have none of the above, the hand with the highest card wins.
TOP

Glossary
All In
A player who runs out of chips during the course of a hand is said to be "all-in." He is entitled
only to that portion of the pot which existed at the time he went all-in (see also Main Pot and
Side Pots).
Betting Limits
The amount a player may bet or raise on any turn is set by the betting limits of the game. For
example, a 3-6 table requires bets or raises to be $3 for the first two rounds of betting, and $6
for the last two rounds of betting. Likewise, a 4-8 table requires bets or raises to be $4 and $8
for the first two and last two rounds respectively.
Betting Round
One round of betting. There are four betting rounds in a given hand: before the flop, after the
flop, after the turn, and after the river.
Big Blind
The big blind is made by the player immediately to the left of the small blind, and is equal to
the minimum bet. For example, the big blind in a 3-6 game is $3, and in a 4-8 game, $4.
Blinds
The blinds are required bets made by the two people to the left of the dealer button before
any cards are dealt, and serve to get money into the pot initially.
Burn Cards
In a live game, the dealer is required to deal one card off the top of the deck face down into
the muck immediately prior to dealing the flop, the turn card, and the river card. These are
called "burn cards."
Buy-in
When a player first sits down at the table and buys chips, it is called a "buy-in". The minimum
buy-in for True Poker is 10 times the small bet. For example, in a 3-6 game, the minimum
buy-in is $30. After a player has bought his initial chips and wishes to buy more, he can then

purchase any quantity of chips provided it is $10 or greater.


Call
Once a bet has been made in a given round, if a player matches the bet (i.e. does not raise or
fold), it is a "call."
Check
If there has not been a bet made in a given hand, a player can "check," which means he is
not betting and is letting his turn pass without increasing the amount in the pot.
Chips
Circular color-coded discs used for betting, chips are available in denominations of $1, $3, $5,
$25, $100, $500.
Fold
If a player elects to fold, he withdraws from the hand and forfeits all bets he has placed up to
that point in the hand. Typically a player will fold when he does not want to call a bet in order
to stay in the hand.
Hand
One complete game beginning with the posting of the blinds and concluding with one or more
players winning the pot.
Main Pot and Side Pots
If a player runs out of chips in the course of a hand, (i.e. he goes "all-in") the pot is split into a
"main pot", which is the pot that existed up to the point any players went all in, and a "side
pot", which is that portion of the pot to which the all-in player does not participate, and cannot
win.
Muck Cards
All discarded cards lying face down in front of the dealer, consisting of all folded cards and all
"burn cards."
Pot
The total number of chips that are bet in a given round. Once betting in a round is complete,
the total chips bet are moved into a pile near the center of the table.
Raise
Once a bet has been made in a given round, any subsequent increases to the amount bet is
called a raise. If the bet is increased after it has been raised, this is called a re-raise.
Rake
The house charges a commission -- the "rake" -- as a percentage of the total pot won at the
end of each hand. This represents the only source of revenue for the house, since all
winnings go to the players. The rake amount is never more than $3 and is determined by the
number of players at the table, and the amount in the total pot. For more information on the
rake amounts, please visit About Money.
Small Blind
The small blind is made by the player immediately to the left of the dealer button and is equal
to half of the minimum bet, rounded down to the nearest dollar. For example, the small blind
in a 3-6 game is $1, and in a 4-8 game, $2.
Split Pot
If two or more players have the same hand at the showdown, the pot is split equally between
them. If the pot cannot be split equally, the odd dollar is paid to the player next in line for the
Blinds.
Table Stakes

A convention of poker, followed in most card rooms including True Poker, which dictates that a
player can only play with those chips he has at the beginning of the hand. In other words, a
player is not allowed to buy more chips during the course of a hand.

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