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Index > Poker games and rules >
Popular poker games
How do you play Texas Hold'em?
Author: Michael Maurer
Last updated: Jan 2004
Copyright © 2009 Michael Maurer
The official and up-to-date version of this answer is
here.
Texas Hold'em is a "community card" game, meaning that some
cards are dealt face-up in the middle of the table and shared by
all the players. Each player has two down cards that are theirs
alone, and combines them with the five community cards to make the
best possible five-card hand.
Play begins by dealing two cards face down to each player; these
are known as "hole cards" or "pocket cards". This is followed by a
round of betting. Most hold'em games get the betting started with
one or two "blind bets" to the left of the dealer. These are forced
bets which must be made before seeing one's cards. Play proceeds
clockwise from the blinds, with each player free to fold, call the
blind bet, or raise. Usually the blinds are "live", meaning that
they may raise themselves when the action gets back around to
them.
Now three cards are dealt face up in the middle of the table;
this is called the "flop". A round of betting ensues, with action
starting on the first blind, immediately to the dealers left.
Another card is dealt face up (the "turn"), followed by another
round of betting, again beginning to the dealer's left. Then the
final card (the "river") is dealt followed by the final round of
betting. In a structured-limit game, the bets on the turn and river
are usually double the size of those before and on the flop.
The game is usually played for high only, and each player makes
the best five-card combination to compete for the pot. Players
usually use both their hole cards to make their best hand, but this
is not required. A player may even choose to "play the board" and
use no hole cards at all. Identical five-card hands split the pot;
the sixth and seventh cards are not used to break ties. For a more
detailed explanation of ties, see the section on splitting the pot.
Copyright © 2009 Michael Maurer.
Unauthorized copying prohibited. Contact
info@rgpfaq.com for
permission to redistribute.