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Poker can be played in a mixed game format, for example
one half hour of Texas hold 'em followed by one half
hour of Seven-card stud. There are many types of mixed
poker games. The most notable mixed poker variation is
H.O.R.S.E poker. H.O.R.S.E is a mix of Texas hold 'em,
Omaha high-low, Razz, Seven-card stud and Seven Card
Stud Eight-or-better. Each game will usually be played
for a fixed number of hands or time and then the players
will move on to the next game.
Other mixed games include:
H.O.S.E - same as H.O.R.S.E, except without Razz.
H.O.E - same as H.O.R.S.E, except no Razz or Seven-card
stud.
H.O - Texas hold 'em and Omaha high-low
O.E - Omaha high-low and Seven-card Stud Eight or
better.
H.A - Pot limit Texas hold 'em and pot limit Omaha.
Omaha High-low Mixed - Fixed limit Omaha and pot limit
Omaha high-low
Holdem Mixed - Fixed limit and no limit Texas hold 'em.
Eight Game Mix - Fixed limit 2-7 Triple Draw, fixed
limit Texas hold 'em, fixed limit Omaha Hi-Low Eight or
better, Razz, fixed limit Seven-card stud, fixed limit
Seven-card stud Hi-Low eight or better, no limit Texas
hold 'em and pot limit Omaha.
Ten Game Mix (to be introduced on 2011 World Series of
Poker) - No limit Hold'em, fixed limit Seven-card Razz,
fixed limit Hold'em, fixed limit Badugi, fixed limit
Seven-card Stud, no limit 2-7 Single Draw, fixed limit
Omaha Hi-Low eight or better, pot limit Omaha, fixed
limit 2-7 Triple Draw and fixed limit Seven-card stud
Hi-Low eight or better (played with 6 players on a
table).
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The three most popular poker variants are spread in
casinos and poker rooms worldwide and can be divided
into the following groups:
Draw poker: Games in which players are dealt a
complete hand, hidden, and then improve it by
replacing cards. The most common of these is
Five-card draw.
Stud poker: Games in which each player receives a
combination of face-up cards and face-down cards in
multiple betting rounds. The most common of these
are Seven-card stud and Five-card stud.
Community card poker: Games in which each player's
incomplete hidden hand is combined with shared
face-up cards. The most common of these are Texas
hold 'em and Omaha hold 'em.
Common rule variations:
1.Lowball: The lowest hand wins the pot. There are
different rules about whether or not aces count as
low, and the effects of straights and flushes. The
most common variants are Razz and 2-7 Triple Draw
2.High-low split: the highest and lowest hands split
the pot. Generally there is a qualifier for the low
hand. For example, the low hand must have 5 cards
with ranks of 8 or less. In most high-low games the
usual rank of poker hands is observed, so that an
unsuited broken straight (7-5-4-3-2) wins low (see
Morehead, Official Rules of Card Games). In a
variant, based on Lowball, where only the low hand
wins, a straight or a flush does not matter for a
low hand. So the best low hand is 5-4-3-2-A, suited
or not.
3.Players can pass cards to each other. An example
of this would be Anaconda.
4.'Kill game'. When a fixed limit game is played and
a player wins two pots in a row, the stakes are
doubled. In some split-pot games (e.g., Omaha), a
player winning both halves of the pot may also cause
a kill. In some variants of Lowball, a player may
choose to kill by placing a double bet after seeing
his first two cards.
5.Wild cards are added. This can range from simply
making deuces wild to the wild 7-stud variant of
baseball.
6.A twist round in which players can buy another
card from the deck. If a player does not like the
purchased card, the player can purchase another one
by adding money to the pot. This is sometimes called
a "Tittle."
7.A stripped deck may be used. Poker was first
played with only 20 cards. In the spirit of poker
history, players will sometimes only play with a
stripped deck. A popular poker game in Spain is
played with cards 8-A. It is played similar to
hold'em, except that one card is dealt at a time and
a player must use both hole cards.
8.A royal deck is where players uses two decks but
only 48-56 cards. The playing deck is made up of the
cards 9-A from both decks making the number of cards
48. In some variations of the game (typical for
larger groups) the 8's maybe also be included,
making the total number of cards 56. Same rules as
normal poker apply, though suit ranking may also be
used since the probability that two players will
have similar hands may increase with this variation.
9.The double flip variant (also known as doomsday
and the jaws of victory) was introduced in pub/club
games throughout Europe in recent years and was
devised to keep inactive (‘busted out’) players in
the mix, and therefore, in the pub or club. If
players are heads-up (i.e. there are only 2 players
left) in a tournament, and both players have the
same ranked pocket pairs (e.g. both players have KK,
or both players have 33 etc.) and if on the same
hands, one of the players is all-in and called (or
calls with his/her entire stack), then the double
flip situation occurs. All players that were
previously present on the table (and subsequent
‘busted out’) will be given a share of the pot
(determined at the start of the game – usually the
pot will just be split between the inactive players
who are still present and the player who was all-in,
with the chip-leading receiving no part of the pot;
the unlucky heads-up players [the chances of both
players having the same ranked pair is 1 in 20,825]
receive nothing in this situation). Play then
continues as per normal. The rule is common practice
now in all pub/club games throughout Europe and is
becoming more popular in North America.
10.Roll your own is played in stud games, and allows
the player to determine which of his or her cards
are turned up and visible to the other players. In a
game like Seven-card Stud, the "roll" action only
applies to the first 3 cards, all of which are dealt
face down. Each player then determines which card to
expose. Play then continues as with regular
Seven-card Stud. But a game like Mexican Stud
applies the roll option throughout the game. Two
cards are dealt face down, and the players roll one
card up. The game continues just as in Five-card
Stud, except the cards are dealt face down, and each
player then decides which of the two down cards is
exposed. Whether cards are rolled in player order,
or all at once, should be decided before the game
begins, if not already dictated by the specific
game's rules, as there is an advantage to being able
to see your opponents exposed cards before deciding
which card you will roll.
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