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Getting Started: The Rules of Texas Hold'em Poker
For the sake of
simplicity, we have chosen to explain the rules that you will encounter playing
Texas hold'em poker online. These rules also apply to most Texas hold’em
poker games you will encounter in brick and mortar casinos but there are a few
variations (typically having to do with the blinds) that we won’t go into here.
If after reading the rules you are still unclear about how to play, go to the
poker room reviews and sign up with one of the online poker rooms. It is free to
sign up and you can play with "play money" until you get the hang of
it.
HOW THE GAME
IS PLAYED
The rules of
Texas hold'em are simple to understand. At a full table, you will be playing
with nine other players. After each deal, a small, circular puck (called the ‘button’)
is passed from one player to the next, rotating clockwise. Since all games
feature a house dealer, the button is used to denote which player will be
representing the dealer on each deal. The primary benefit of having the button
is that you will be able to act last on all future betting rounds (except for
the first betting round). Being able to act last is always an advantage in poker,
since you will be able to see how much your opponents like their hands before
you have to commit any money to the pot.
At the beginning
of each hand, the player to the button's left is forced to make a ‘blind bet’,
equal to 1/2 of the small bet (the small bet is equal to the bet increments
before the flop and on the flop. In a $3/$6 game, a small bet is three dollars.
In a $10/$20 game, a small bet is ten dollars. The big bets, which are the
betting increments on the turn and the river, would six and twenty dollars
respectively). This player is called the ‘small blind’. Then the player to
the small blind’s left posts an amount equal to one small bet. This player is
called the big blind.
Once the blinds
are posted, each player is dealt two cards face down. The first player to act is
the player to the big blind’s left. He can fold, call a bet equal to one small
bet, or raise to two small bets. These are his only options. After he has acted,
the player to his left must act. If the first player raised, his only options
are to fold, or call the raise, or to reraise to three small bets. Every player
acts after the player to his right acts, moving around the table clockwise. When
it’s the small blind’s turn, she can either fold, or call, or raise. The
amount that she has already put into the pot—his small blind—is considered
‘live’ money, which means it counts towards the amount that she must call.
So, in a $1/$2 game, if nobody has raised, the small blind need only put fifty
cents into the pot to call. If there has been one raise, she need put in $1.50,
as opposed to the 2 dollars that all other players must put into the pot. If she
wants to raise, the amount of the small blind is again deducted from the total
amount she must ‘put in the middle’. The same rules apply to the big blind
as apply to the small blind, except that, if nobody has raised, the big blind
can either raise by putting an additional small bet in the pot, or elect to see
the flop without having to put up any money other than the amount he already put
up for his big blind.
After the pre
flop betting round has concluded, three cards are placed face-up in the middle
of the table. This is called the "flop". All of the cards on the flop
are community cards, which means all players still active in the hand can use
these cards to make their best five card poker hand. The betting round on the
flop is essentially the same as the action before the flop, with the bets coming
in increments of one small bet at a time, except that here the player who was
the small blind must act first (as opposed to the player to the left of the big
blind, who acted first before the flop) and the player on the button gets to act
last. After the flop betting round has concluded, a fourth community card is
turned face-up. This card is called the "turn". The betting round here
mirrors the betting round on the flop, in terms of who must act first and who
acts last, except that now the bets have doubled in size. In a $1/$2 game, for
example, the bets now come in increments of two dollars.
After the turn
action, a fifth community card, called the "river", is turned face-up.
The betting round on the river is exactly the same as the betting round on the
turn, with bets coming in increments of two dollars. This is the last card of
the hand. When the river betting round is finished all players still in the hand
must turn their hands up, and make their best five card poker hands out of the
seven cards available.
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