Poker Games Guide: Texas Hold 'em Poker
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About this ebook
This book is an introduction to the poker game, emphasizing on the Texas Hold 'em Poker, the betting structure, poker variants, poker strategy and specific poker tournaments.
The popularity of poker (mainly the no-limit Texas hold'em) reached an unprecedented peak in the 2000s. This "poker boom" is attributed to several factors: the invention of online poker, the television broadcast tournaments (with miniature cameras revealing the cards), the presentation of the online poker sites in television commercials, and victory in 2003 of Chris Moneymaker at the World Series of Poker.
Not only the public can now follow the actions of the tournaments on television, turning this game in the sporting spectacle, but it can also be played directly from home. The spread of tournaments such as the World Series of Poker and the World Poker Tour created a strong following among television program providers by cable or satellite. Because of the hype, professional players have become celebrities, with many fans around the world participating in tournaments in the hope of being confronted with these celebrities.
Poker is played in many variations but there are three large families. They differ firstly by the way of distribution of playing cards. Cards can be shared by all players or private for each player. They can also be closed (visible only by the owner of cards) or open (visible to all). There are also differences in the game base on stakes. The winning hands can be high, low or both (high/low). In some embodiments where poker is played high and low hands, certain conditions are imposed on low hands. For example, a player's hand can not contain card over eight (eight or better), or aces can count only as high card (deuce to seven).
”Poker is a microcosm of all we admire and disdain about capitalism and democracy. It can be rough-hewn or polished, warm or cold, charitable and caring or hard and impersonal. It is fickle and elusive, but ultimately it is fair, and right, and just.” -- Lou Krieger
Nicolae Sfetcu
Owner and manager with MultiMedia SRL and MultiMedia Publishing House. Project Coordinator for European Teleworking Development Romania (ETD) Member of Rotary Club Bucuresti Atheneum Cofounder and ex-president of the Mehedinti Branch of Romanian Association for Electronic Industry and Software Initiator, cofounder and president of Romanian Association for Telework and Teleactivities Member of Internet Society Initiator, cofounder and ex-president of Romanian Teleworking Society Cofounder and ex-president of the Mehedinti Branch of the General Association of Engineers in Romania Physicist engineer - Bachelor of Science (Physics, Major Nuclear Physics). Master of Philosophy.
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Poker Games Guide - Nicolae Sfetcu
Poker Games Guide - Texas Hold 'em Poker
Nicolae Sfetcu
Published by: MultiMedia Publishing
Copyright 2018 Nicolae Sfetcu
Published by MultiMedia Publishing, https://www.telework.ro/en/publishing/
ISBN: 978-606-9041-48-2
Source: Telework, translation and adaptation Nicolae Sfetcu, CC BY-SA 3.0. CC BY-SA 3.0 text license
DISCLAIMER:
The author and publisher are providing this book and its contents on an as is
basis and make no representations or warranties of any kind with respect to this book or its contents. The author and publisher disclaim all such representations and warranties for a particular purpose. In addition, the author and publisher do not represent or warrant that the information accessible via this book is accurate, complete or current.
Except as specifically stated in this book, neither the author or publisher, nor any authors, contributors, or other representatives will be liable for damages arising out of or in connection with the use of this book. This is a comprehensive limitation of liability that applies to all damages of any kind, including (without limitation) compensatory; direct, indirect or consequential damages, including for third parties.
You understand that this book is not intended as a substitute for consultation with a licensed, educational, legal or finance professional. Before you use it in any way, you will consult a licensed professional to ensure that you are doing what’s best for your situation.
This book provides content related to educational topics. As such, use of this book implies your acceptance of this disclaimer.
Poker
Poker is a family of card games with many forms and variations. It is practiced as a multi-player game with a typically fifty-two cards and chips representing the amount wagered.
The sequences of play alternate distribution of cards and rounds. The goal is to win the chips of opponents by creating the best combination of five cards or making them to give up.
Poker is a gambling game, the game structure therefore imposes most of the time and, in all its variants, the player invests a starting amount (however small). The score of a player is shown by its financial gains. Mastering the game requires at least intuitive knowledge of hand distribution probability, probability and mechanisms of their improvements in the played variant, and above all, an excellent knowledge of the psychology of the game and of the opponents.
The common core of variants include the auction system in several steps, the principle of chopping the game if there is a tie in bets, types of hands and their hierarchy. The game variants differ in the cards dealing, organization of the rounds of betting, and the fact that some cards may be exposed or be common to all hands.
Poker popularity
The popularity of poker (mainly the no-limit Texas hold'em) reached an unprecedented peak in the 2000s. This poker boom
is attributed to several factors: the invention of online poker, the television broadcast tournaments (with miniature cameras revealing the cards), the presentation of the online poker sites in television commercials, and victory in 2003 of Chris Moneymaker at the World Series of Poker.
Not only the public can now follow the actions of the tournaments on television, turning this game in the sporting spectacle, but it can also be played directly from home. The spread of tournaments such as the World Series of Poker and the World Poker Tour created a strong following among television program providers by cable or satellite. Because of the hype, professional players have become celebrities, with many fans around the world participating in tournaments in the hope of being confronted with these celebrities.
According to a university study on online poker, the number of players playing for money (in cash games) in 2010 was estimated at 5,5 million, 1,3 million players (21%) from the USA, 450.000 from Germany, 350.000 in France. These players were outnumbered by those who do not bet real money (playmoney). Compared to the population, it is the countries of northern Europe that count the most players (gamblers), with 1.3% of the population in Denmark (followed by Iceland, Estonia, Netherlands, Norway , Finland). The majority of these players have between 18-35 (44% between 21-25 years). On average each player would lose $432 each year5. Globally, the most representative poker sites were, in 2010, PokerStars (40% market share) and ex-Full Tilt Poker (20%), and in 2011, from PokerStrategy information sites, 2 + 2 and PokerNews. According to some estimates, the online poker market in 2010 would have been $2.5 billion (650 million US players).
General rules
All poker variants meet a number of general principles.
Poker is a game of combinations that is played with cards and chips possibly representing money. The combinations are made with five cards regardless of the variant practiced. The game alternates stages of dealing cards and auctions.
Aim of the game
In general, the goal of the game is to win chips from other players. If the tournament is played, the goal is to play as long as possible and finish the game in the top of the standings, one of said payouts. The first classification is the one who wins all the chips of the participants. If you play in cash games, each player sits down at the table with an amount of chips directly convertible to cash. The goal is obviously the same as in tournament mode: to win tokens. However, there was a noticeable difference in a tournament, you can not convert your chips to cash at anz time. Only paid up saving money when in a cash game, the player is free to leave the table and share his chips against money.
In Caribbean poker and caribbean stud poker version, less widespread and similar to blackjack, the player faces a dealer and try to win the maximum fees.
Shuffling
Prior to each hand, the playing cards are always mixed either by the dealer (if there is one) or the player cut off
, which happens to be the dealer (or button
) previously.
To do this, different techniques are commonly used. There are all sorts of shuffling ranging from salad to more dramatic variations. Here are some:
Battle or salad
shuffle. Technique used in casinos, it is both the most effective but certainly one that requires less dexterity. All the cards are disposed on the table face hidden. Then gathered into a pile. This technique is commonly prior to mixing ways.
French shuffle (also called Belote
shuffle)
Riffle shuffle
(pack of half in each hand, the cards are slaughtered alternately at full speed, right and left, then back in a single package). Variant riffle shuffle in the air
.
Dovetail or American shuffle (also called stripping shuffle)
Indian shuffle (like French shuffle but taking the cards in the width direction)
Spanish shuffle (pack of half in each hand, the cards are arranged in a fan and joined by their upper portion in one package)
Shuffling alternating layers
(map overlay the top and bottom of the package). Technique is not providing the cut, but combined with a mixture of French or stripping shuffle is as effective. Say alternating arithmetic
when overlays are counted.
Russian shuffle (a hand shuffle and the other rifle)
Table
Two to ten players are arranged around a table. A button is assigned to the dealer - which can be virtual if table has a croupier. The game is played clockwise starting from the dealer.
In position late
are the dealer
, which is the last to speak, and the cut off is the penultimate talking. These are the two positions where the raises are quite common because they have the advantage of position, that is to say, because they speak last.
Card combinations
A poker hand always consists of five cards exactly. Depending on the variants, the strongest hand wins (variants played high) or the lowest hand (variants played low) or the highest hand and the lowest hand is taken into account (variants played high/low).
Blinds
Before receiving their cards, players must place the blinds that are of three kinds: antes, blinds and bring-in. Can be used the three kinds in the same game.
In tournaments, the blinds go up in steps (or levels) for three to twenty minutes or more. The increase in value may vary from a quarter to a third of the value of the last blind. A table announces the different levels before the start of each tournament.
Antes
The ante (from the Latin avant) is a forced bet placed by each player at the table. It does not change the playing order. In general it is a setting of 10% to 20% of the big blind. The introduction of antes after a few blind levels, often gives a great boost to attempts to steal
the blinds during the auction.
Blinds
The blinds are placed by the two players to the left of the dealer, the first placing the small blind and the second asking the big blind worth double the small blind. The blinds allow to speak last in the first round of betting. If no one has raised before it, the player in the big blind still has the right to raise.
The player to the left of the big blind is called UTG player
(under the gun), because has to talk first, so he is in a less favorable position for the rest of the round. Some variants allow the option
for the UTG player
to bet double the big blind before receiving his cards and speak last in the first round of betting.
The big blind also represents the minimum raise that players can ask at the auction that follow.
Bring-in
The bring-in is a forced bet used in the type of variations called studs that must be asked by a player under certain conditions (usually the one with the lowest upcard).
Auction
Auctions determine how each player in turn is allowed to bet any or all of his chips.
The basic principle is that a player must call
the same amount as last raiser to stay in the game. If he does not, he passes
losing its previous updates and ambitions on the current pot;