Texas
Hold Em
Before we get into describing the rules and game-play,
here's a quick glossary of terms you'll encounter.
Blinds: Short for " blind bets," these
are the forced bets made before the cards are dealt.
In Hold'em, blinds take the place of the classic " ante."
Burn Card: The card dealt facedown before any community card is dealt.
Button: Nickname for the player acting as the dealer in current hand.
Check: Similar to a call, but no money is bet. If there is no raise preflop,
the big blind may check.
Fifth Street: See River.
Flop: The first three community cards dealt.
Fourth Street: See Turn.
Preflop: Anything that occurs before the flop is dealt is preflop.
River: The final (5th) community card dealt also known as fifth street.
Showdown: When players reveal their hands to discover the pot's winner.
Turn: The fourth community card dealt also known as fourth street.
OVERVIEW
Texas Hold'em is a community card poker
game, with game play focused as much on the betting
as on the
cards being played.
Although the rules and game play remain mostly
the same, the end goal is slightly different depending
on if you're playing a cash game or a tournament.
A Hold'em tournament is the
same as any other game of Hold'em with a few added
rules and twists.
Texas Holdem is played on a single table with two
to 10 players. The goal is simple: win as many chips
as you can, one pot at a time.
You win a pot by having the best hand, or by having
all other players fold before the showdown.
The structure of Texas Hold'em can be broken up
into three main divisions:
-Setup
-Betting Rounds
-Showdown
SETUP Once you have your players sitting around the table,
the first thing you need to have is chips. Before
you can figure out what kind of chips to give each
player, you need to understand how the game works
a little better, so we'll get back to this.
For now, assume all players have chips in front
of them.
The next step is picking the player who will start
with the dealer button. Hold'em is played with what's
known as a rotating dealer, meaning a player will
act as the dealer for one hand, handing the role
of dealer to the player on their left when the hand
is completed.
To choose the dealer, either deal every player
one card, or spread the cards facedown on the table
and have every player choose one.
The player with the highest-valued card (aces are
high for selecting a dealer) starts as the dealer.
If you're in a place with a professional dealer,
or someone volunteers to always physically deal
the cards, the dealer button will still rotate around
the table.
Even though they're not physically dealing the
cards, for all intents and purposes, the person
with the button is viewed as being the dealer for
the hand. Once the hand completes, the player with
the dealer button will pass it to the player on
their left.
PUTTING OUT THE BLINDS
Now that you have a dealer,
you need to put out the blinds.
There are two blinds in Holdem - a small blind
and a big blind. The player directly to the left
of the dealer puts out the small blind.
The big blind (exactly, or conveniently close to,
double that of the small blind) is placed by the
player to the left of the small blind.
The size of the blinds will dictate the stakes
of the game you're about to play. Typically, you
want players to buy in for no less than 100 times
the size of the big blind.
If you want to buy in for
$20, you should play with blinds 10¢ /20¢ , or for convenience,
most people will play 10¢ /25¢ .
Back to
chips: Once the blinds are set we know
what kind of chips we'll need to play. (In the above
example, we'd use 10¢ chips, 25¢ chips
and maybe a few $1 chips.)
You want to give players enough chips in each denomination
to allow the game to run smoothly.
Typically a player will need only 10% of their
total chips in the smallest denomination, as they
are only ever used to pay the small blind. For the
most part, all betting will be done with chips larger
than that of the small blind.
Once you have the blinds
out, you're now ready to deal the first hand.
GAME PLAY AND BETTING ROUNDS
The person dealing
the cards deals to the left of the player with the
dealer
button first, rotating
around the table in a clockwise manner, giving each
player one card at a time until each player has
two cards. These are known as your hole cards.
A hand of Hold'em consists of a minimum of one
and a maximum of four betting rounds. A hand ends
when all players but one have folded, or the fourth
and final betting round completes with multiple
players still in the hand - whichever comes first.
At that point, players enter into the showdown
(to be explained in the next section).
PREFLOP
When all players receive their hole cards,
you are now in the preflop betting round.
Each player must look at their cards and decide
what action they would like to take. In Hold'em,
only one player can act at a time.
The preflop betting round starts with the player
to the left of the big blind. This player has three
options:
Fold: They pay nothing to the pot and throw
away their hand, waiting for the next deal to play
again.
Call: They match the amount of the big blind.
Raise: They raise the bet by doubling
the amount of the big blind. A player may raise
more depending on the betting style being played.
Once a player has made their action, the player
to the left of them gets their turn to act. Each
player is given the same options: fold, call the
bet of the player to their right (if the previous
player raised, that is the amount you must call)
or raise.
A raise is always the amount
of one bet in addition to the amount of the previous
bet, for example:
if the big blind is 25¢ , and the first player
to act would like to raise, they put in a total
of 50¢ (the big blind + one additional bet).
If the next player would
like to reraise, they would put in a total of
75¢ (the previous bet
+ one additional bet).
A betting round ends when two conditions are met:
1. All players have had a chance to act.
2. All players who haven't folded have bet the same amount of money for the
round.
EXAMPLE BETTING ROUND 1
There
are five players at the table:
Player 1 - Button
Player 2 - Small blind (10¢ )
Player 3 - Big blind
(25¢ )
Start of betting round
Player 4 - Calls the big
blind (25¢ )
Player 5 - folds
Player 1 - Calls the big blind (25¢ )
Player
2 - Calls the big blind (since they already have 10¢ bet, they only have to add another
15¢ , for a total of 25¢ )
Player 3 - Checks
(since they already have the bet matched, they do
not need to add more money
to call this is called checking)
End of betting round
When Player 2 calls the big blind, all players
now have the same amount of money in front of them,
but Player 3 (the big blind) has not had a chance
to act, so the betting round is not over.
Once Player 3 checks, both conditions are met,
and the betting round is over.
EXAMPLE BETTING ROUND 2
There are five players at the table:
Player 1 - Button
Player 2 - Small blind (10¢ )
Player
3 - Big blind (25¢ )
Start of betting round
Player 4 - Calls the big blind
(25¢ )
Player 5 - Raises (50¢ )
Player 1
- Folds
Player 2 - Folds
Player 3 - Reraises (they already
have 25¢ in
as the big blind. They complete the bet of 50¢ ,
and add one additional bet for a total of 75¢ )
Player
4 - Folds (their previous call of 25¢ is
now in the pot)
Player 5 - Calls (matches the bet of
Player 3 for a total of 75¢ )
End of betting round
In this scenario all players had had a chance to
act when Player 3 made the reraise. But all players
did not have the same amount of money bet.
Once Player 4 folds, only Player 3 and Player 5
are left in the pot. When Player 5 calls, both conditions
are met, and the betting round ends.
THE FLOP
Once the preflop betting round ends, the flop
is dealt. This is done by dealing the top card in
the
deck facedown on the table (it becomes the burn
card), followed by three cards faceup.
Once this has been dealt, the first post-flop betting
round begins.
The rules of a post-flop betting round are the
same as a preflop, with two small exceptions: The
first player to act is the next player with a hand
to the left of the dealer, and the first player
to act can check or bet as there has been no bet
made, calling is free.
A bet on the flop is the
amount of the big blind. In our game, a player
must put out 25¢ to make
a bet.
THE TURN Once
the betting round on the flop completes, the dealer
deals one card
facedown followed by a single
card faceup, also known as the " burn and turn." Once
the turn has been dealt, the third betting round
starts.
The third betting round is
identical to the flop betting round with one single
exception: The size
of a bet for this round, and the final betting round,
is doubled, meaning that to make a bet in our game
will now cost a player 50¢ .
THE RIVER
Assuming more than one player is left, having
not folded on one of the previous streets, the river
is now dealt. Dealing the river is identical as
dealing the turn, with one card being dealt facedown,
followed by a single card faceup.
This is the final street, and no more cards will
be dealt in this hand. The betting round is identical
to the betting round on the turn.
SHOWDOWN
Once the river betting round has been completed,
the players now enter into the showdown. At this
point, the best hand wins the pot. Here are the
rules you need to know about a Hold'em showdown:
-The player who bet on the
river is the default first player to reveal their
hand. If any other
players choose to show their hand first, that is
OK.
-If no betting happened on the river (all players checked), the player closest
to the left of the dealer must open their hand first, continuing clockwise
around the table.
-If a player is holding a losing hand, it is their option to reveal their
cards or simply muck their hand and concede the pot.
EVALUATING HANDS
In Hold'em you must make the best hand possible
using any combination of your two cards and the
five community cards on the table.
You can use both,
one or none of your own cards in making your best hand. Here are some rules
about
evaluating a winning poker hand:
-The poker hand ranking order can be found here.
There are no exceptions to this ordering: a flush
always beats a straight, and three of a kind always
beats two pair.
-There are no hands used in Hold'em other than the
hands listed in this chart. For example, having
three pairs is actually only " two pair," with
the highest-valued two pair making your hand.
-Poker hands must be exactly five cards, and only those five cards are used
to evaluate the winning hand. For
Both players hold the very same hand (a straight
from ten to ace). This means the pot is split between
the two players. The remaining cards and the fact
Player 1 also has a pair means nothing - only the
best five-card hand factors into deciding the winner.
-If all remaining players have nothing (no pair
or anything stronger), the winning hand is the hand
with the highest-valued single card, meaning:
-Suits are never used to evaluate the strength of a hand.
Once you determine the winning hand, that player
receives the pot. The dealer passes the dealer button
to his or her left and the two players to the left
of the new dealer put out their big and small blinds
respectively.
RANDOM RULES
Raising
-When there are more than
two players still in the hand, only one bet and
three raises can be made
in one betting round. Once the third raise is made
the betting is " capped." Once betting
is capped, players may only call or fold.
-A player must either declare their intent to raise verbally before making
any actions, or bring the amount of chips equal to the total amount of their
raise into play at the same time. A player is not allowed to place chips, return
to their stack and place more chips. This is known as a string bet.
-Solutions to any other random situation you come across can be found here.
Buying Chips
-The minimum number of chips a player is allowed
to buy before their first hand dealt is determined
by the house rules governing the game. Typically
a minimum is 50-100 times the big blind.
-There is no maximum to the number of chips a player may buy at any time.
-A player may reload, or add more chips to their stack, at any time between
hands. Once a hand is started, a player may only use the chips they had in
play at the beginning of the hand, during that hand. Any additional chips will
not be " in play" until the next deal.
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