|
|
|
| Welcome to Online Poker - Unforgettable Cards |
Pai-Gow Casino
Poker, or double-hand poker, is an Americanized version of Pai Gow,is
played with playing cards using poker hand rankings while is played with
chinese dominoes. This type of poker became the one of the most popular card games played in online casinos.
The game is played with a standard 52-card deck of
cards, plus a single joker. It is played on a table marked with seven
betting locations if one of the players serves as "bank"; in a live game
where players play against the house, there are only six betting spots.
Pai-Gow Casino Poker cards are shuffled, and then
dealt to the table in seven face-down piles of seven cards, with four
cards unused, regardless of the number of people playing. Each round's
deal begins on a randomly-selected position on the table, with the hands
after the first being dealt to the player's left around the table.
One common way of doing this is to roll three
six-sided dice, then count betting spots clockwise from the first until
the number on the dice is reached; then give that spot the first hand,
the next spot the next hand, and so on until all seven hands have been
allotted (this is an adaptation of the similar procedure used.
Otherwise, the position is derived from a random-number generator as
shown on a display above the dealing apparatus. If there is no bet
placed on a particular spot, the hand is still assigned but then placed
in the discards with the four unused cards.
Each player on the game is playing against the
bank, who may be the casino dealer or one of the other players.
If each of your now-separated hands beats the bank
corresponding hand, then you win your bet. If only one of your hands
beats the bank, then you push. If both of your hands lose to the bank,
then you lose. On each individual , ties go to the bank. This gives the
bank a small advantage. If you foul your hand, meaning that your low
hand outranks your high hand or that there are an incorrect number of
cards in each hand, there will be a penalty, either re-arrangement of
the hand according to house rules or forfeiture of the hand.
Before the deal the player makes his/her bet.
Seven cards are dealt to the player. The player looks at his cards and
divides them to form two hands: a 2-card hand and a 5-card hand. The
relative values of the 5-card hand are the same as in poker, with the
five aces beating a royal flush. And a A, 2, 3, 4, 5 straight being
rated the second highest straight after A, K, Q, J, 10. For the 2-card
hand any pair beats any 2 unmatched cards, but no other combinations are
possible. The player must arrange the cards so that the 5-card hand is
higher than the 2-card hand (if the two cards are a pair of aces, the
5card hand would have to contain two pairs or better).
When the player is ready, he/she clicks on the
"Done" button and the dealer's cards will be exposed. The dealer forms
the seven cards into a 5-card hand and a 2-card hand the same way as a
player.
The result between the dealer and the player is
determined by comparing the player's 5-card hand and the player's 2-card
hand vs. the dealers 2-card hand.
If the player wins both hands, the dealer pays out
the amount bet by the player less a 5% commission. The commission is
collected from the payoff. If the dealer wins one hand and the player
wins the other, no money changes hands. This is called a "Push".
If the dealer wins both hands the dealer collects
the player's bets. If either hand is tied, the dealer wins that
particular hand. If the dealer wins or ties the other hand, it is a win
for the dealer. If one hand is tied and the player wins the other hand,
it is a Push.
After the player has made his first bet, the
"second hand" button will highlight offering the opportunity for playing
a second hand at the same time. Pai-Gow Casino Rules for playing the
second hand are the same.
The goal of the game is to divide the four tiles
into two pairs or hands (a five-card poker hand and a two-card poker
hand). The two-card hand is often called the hand "in front" or "on
top", and the five-card hand is called the hand "behind" or "bottom", as
they are placed that way in front of the player when he is done setting
them. If both your pairs outrank those held by the bank then you win
your bet. If both the bank's pairs outrank yours then you lose your bet.
If one of your pairs outranks those held by the
bank and the other does not then the hand is a draw and you get your
money back. You can qualify for Bonus Payouts if you place a Bonus Bet.
A winning hand pays out at odds of 1:1, less a 5% House Fee taken by the
Casino.
nasetipy.com
|
|
|
|
|