How To Play Texas Hold Em Poker
Texas Hold 'Em resembles Seven Card Stud only in that a total of
seven cards are dealt out in the end, and that five of the seven
cards are used by players to make the best possible hand they
can make. But this is where the similarity ends.
In Texas Hold 'Em, generally known simply as "Hold Em", all
players at the table get two cards face down, which only they
can see, but the remaining five cards are dealt out face up, in
front of the dealer, and are common cards to all the players in
the game. This means that if these five common cards have among
them, say, two Kings, these two Kings are common to everyone at
the who is still in the game at that point. All players can use
these Kings to combine with the two cards they have, plus any of
the remaining cards among the common cards.
Texas Hold 'Em tables are usually bigger than Seven Card Stud
tables, and generally accommodate from 7 to 12 players. In some
casinos games accommodating up to 14 players are also offered.
As in all poker games, dealing begins after the dealer shuffles
the cards. The game uses the standard 52 card deck, without
Jokers and no wild cards. There are many Texas Holdem poker
strategies which may be employed during the game (and I've
written a book on the subject), but for now let's just cover the
basics.
Following the shuffle, the dealer will burn from three to five
cards, depending on House rules. He then begins to deal
clockwise. Each player at the Hold-Em table is given a total of
two down cards, dealt one-by-one to each player in turn, but
only after two of the players have made their mandatory ante
bets. After these two down cards are dealt to each player the
first round of betting takes place. It is only at the conclusion
of this first round of betting, that the dealer burns a single
card and three more cards are
dealt, face up. These three cards are called "the flop" and are
common cards to all the players still in the game. At the
conclusion of all betting in this round, the dealer burns
another card and then deals one additional card face up and adds
this to the flop. Another round of betting takes place, the
process is repeated, and the final seventh card is then dealt,
also face up, and added to the other four. This completes the
total of five common cards. This also begins the final round of
betting, and no more cards will be dealt.
At the beginning of the game, which player gets the first card
out depends on the position of the "dealer's puck". This
dealer's puck is a small, round and white plastic object similar
to that used in Craps, except in Hold-Em it has two white sides
and each side has the word "dealer" written on it. This puck
moves from player to player, clockwise, after each deal. This is
done so that no single player will always get the first card
out, and to prevent any one player from always having to be the
first one to make a bet. This is also done to make sure that all
players at the table will, eventually, have to put up their
mandatory ante bets.
Whoever holds the puck will get the last card dealt at each turn
of the deal. The player sitting to the left of the player with
the dealer's puck gets the first card, player to his left the
next card, and so on. The player to the left of the player
holding the puck also has to make an ante bet in an amount equal
to the table minimum, and the player next to him, on his left,
has to make a second ante bet equal to 1/3 of that, both
mandatory bets in Hold Em. Technically, these first bets are
really blind bets, that is, bets on your own cards even before
you've see them, rather than ante bets, but they are nonetheless
still called an ante.
These ante amounts vary depending on the table limits. Since the
puck moves from player to player around the table after each
hand s completed, eventually all players will have to make such
blind bets. This double-ante requirement is there for three
basic reasons: First, because players making such bets are in
the favored spot, getting the first and second card out
respectively; second, because the player with the higher ante
bet is now able to see how all the other players play and bet
before having to make any further
decisions; and third, to place some action on the table. If
there is no action, and all players fold except one player, that
player still gets a small win. In addition, the player who had
to make the bigger ante bet also gets a chance to raise the bets
at the end of the first round of betting, This opportunity to so
raise the bets is called an "option".
If you do not make the ante bet when it is your turn, or call
yourself out of that hand, or if you were not present at the
table when it was your turn to put up the ante, you get no cards
and now have to wait until the puck comes back around to you in
order to be allowed to play again. You can, however, buy
yourself back in the game at any time after you missed your
blind bet turn, by betting both ante bets out of turn. The
player making the smaller ante bet will be the first player
asked to bet or fold after both initial cards
are dealt to all players, since the player making the higher
ante bet is considered to already have made the minimum required
bet. The first round of betting now takes place among the
remaining players. When all players have checked, bet, raised
and/or called and/or folded, the flop takes place, and
thereafter the remaining rounds of betting, as indicated earlier.
At the final round, when all the remaining active players have
called all the bets, the showdown takes place. These players
turn over their two hole cards, that is, the two down cards that
make up their individual hands, and the dealer will make the
best comparison between each player's set of two hole cards and
the five common cards. Whichever player has the best five-card
Poker hand, using his two hole cards and any of the five common
cards, is declared the winner. He gets the pot.