Impropper rules?
Ok I noticed this;
If the 5 cards on the table are a flush or a straight and none of the players have cards that would make the flush or straight any better, its a split pot.
This can't be right, can it?
It means that if there is a royal flush on the table, its a guaranteed split pot. and you can blindly go all-in.
Making a combination count that requires zero cards from your hand strikes me as a odd and unhelpful rule.
If the 5 cards on the table are a flush or a straight and none of the players have cards that would make the flush or straight any better, its a split pot.
This can't be right, can it?
It means that if there is a royal flush on the table, its a guaranteed split pot. and you can blindly go all-in.
Making a combination count that requires zero cards from your hand strikes me as a odd and unhelpful rule.
Sign in to comment in this discussion.
Comments
In the case of a straight on the table you'd still want to play it out though, since one player might have a card that extends the straight upwards, so in that case there's really no need for a special rule at all. The round may still be interesting.
Yeah I know, there are many variations of the rules.
Anyway, all the IRL games I have played here (Netherlands) were always with the 3+2 rule. This means you can only use 3 cards from the table to make your combination. For a straight or a flush, both cards in your hand need to fit into the combination.
I can understand you allow 4+1, but 5+0 is just very odd to me...