Fun Poker Games

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  1. Fun Poker Games To Play With Friends
  2. Play Free Poker Card Games
  3. Fun Poker Games To Play At Home

How to always win monopoly. Once you've got the game down, you can try your luck at an online or in-person casino. You can also prove your skill by becoming the Governor of Poker right here. Or try wowing your friends while you wipe them clean during a poker night at home. The most popular type of poker is Texas Hold 'Em, which you'll find plenty of here. Poker strategy in dealer's choice card games is somewhat different from Holdem or Omaha. Some of the games use wild cards or kill cards which ultimately make the games more difficult to win. Poker is generally thought of as an adult's game, but with a few simple modifications the various games of poker can easily be played by children. This can be a lifesaver for family game nights, babysitters, and others who need a game to teach children to occupy some time.

Table Of Contents

Maybe you already know how to play poker. Perhaps you don't.

Either way, this is the perfect time to keep your mind busy trying new things, like playing poker online for the first time or maybe even playing online poker for real money.

Whatever you fancy, whatever your resolution, you should try to find the poker games that suit you. What better way to find out than to learn these five popular poker games!

1. Texas Hold'em

Texas Hold'em is the most popular poker game in the world. If you want to learn to play online poker games, this is a great place to start.

This is especially true because most of the marquee tournaments worldwide (WSOP, WPT, EPT, etc.) use this variation.

In a poker game of Texas hold'em, the dealer will shuffle a standard 52-card deck (but will not play in casinos and card rooms).

In home games, the dealer duties are generally shared among all the players at the table (shifting each hand in a clockwise direction).

In poker games with a dealer, a round disc, or a dealer button, moves clockwise each hand, marking which player would be the dealer if the game was self-dealt.

Each player is dealt two hole cards to create the best five-card hand possible. The action moves clockwise but starts to the left of the dealer button.

The two players to the left of the dealer are generally required to post a small and big blind to start the betting and move into the rest of the action on:

  • the pre-flop
  • the flop
  • the turn
  • the river.

Five community cards are displayed in the middle of the table on the flop, the turn and the river and players must make the best five-card combination from their seven cards.

Use this step-by-step guide on how to play Texas' hold'em poker to figure out the blinds and betting rounds before you try your luck in the most popular poker game of all time.

Then, when your mind becomes all poker all the time, you can start looking into strategies based on skill level so that you can explain poker to your friends and rule the online poker rooms.

Some of the best readings to understand how the game works are:

Where to Play Texas Hold'em Online

Texas hold'em is the easiest poker game to find online. You can look at this list of the best mobile poker sites if you want to play from your smartphone, or pick one of our suggested networks.

2. Omaha

If you've learned the Texas hold'em poker rules, buckle your seatbelt. Omaha could be the best poker game for you if you're ready for some bigger swings.

In Omaha poker, players receive four hole cards instead of two and can only use two cards from their hand.

Similarly to a Texas hold'em poker game, Omaha has five community cards with a flop, turn and river.

The betting rounds also play out the same way.

Omaha poker games usually play out in a limit or pot-limit (PLO Poker) format with the most common variations being Omaha High or Omaha 8-or-Better ([URL='https://www.pokernews.com/poker-rules/omaha-hi-lo.htm']Omaha poker Hi/Lo[URL]).

  • Omaha High is like Texas hold'em, with players hoping to win the pot with the best high hand.
  • Omaha 8-or-Better splits the pot between the best high hand and the best low hand; qualifying for the low hand means have five different cards that are ranked eight or lower.

Omaha High is a fast-action poker game and players make the nuts more often than Texas hold'em. Position tends to be important in Omaha when looking at possible hand combinations.

The next step then is to check out the strategy section for all things Omaha. If you don't know where to start, check out these pages:

Where to Play PLO Poker Games Online

3. Seven-card stud

This is the hipster poker game for those not playing along. This is the game that was popular before Texas hold'em exploded.

So take a second before you look into the top sites that offer online poker for real money, learn how to play seven-card stud and use our strategy articles to win big.

Played with two to eight players and without a flop and community cards, 7-card stud is a poker game that starts with two cards face down and a third face up (the hole cards and the door card).

After getting seven cards dealt – three face down and four face-up – you choose the best five-card combination (with the same hand rankings in Texas hold'em or Omaha).

Seven-card stud is most often played as a limit game. Pay attention to the cards of your opponents in this game so as not to underestimate or incorrectly estimate the odds.

To know more about this poker game, have a look at these pages:

Where to Play 7-Card Stud Poker Games Online

4. 2-7 Triple Draw

Once you feel you've tackled the world's best online poker sites, or you're just ready for some advanced poker games, 2-7 Triple Draw will be waiting for you with inverse hand rankings and all.

The goal of a poker game like 2-7 Triple Draw is to make the lowest possible five-card hand as possible in a four-round betting game with three draws a game.

Each round, players choose cards to discard anywhere from zero to five cards, and the dealer will give out replacement cards.

Black diamond casino codes. There is one last round of betting after the third and final draw and then the dealer button determines the order of betting and discarding.

Aces play high, and deuces play low.

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Straights and flushes play against you, so the best hand is 23457 with no flush.

This six-max player game uses a dealer button and the same betting structure as Texas hold'em.

Check out the five tips for success for draw poker or Justin Bonomo's strategy for this poker game once you're feeling comfortable.

Where to Play 2-7 Triple Draw Poker Games Online

5. Open-Faced Chinese Poker (OFC Poker)

There's a special rule in Chinese poker called 'Fantasyland.' Need we say more?

Well, I guess we do if you want to beast this new and exciting form of poker.

This newer poker game, open-faced Chinese poker (OFC Poker), was invented in 2011 and evolved from closed-face, 'regular' Chinese poker.

Chinese poker has players drawing cards from a single deck while trying to make the best hand possible.

Instead of rounds, players play for points, similar to other card games like heart or gin rummy.

After all the card-replacement rounds are complete, players arrange 13 cards into three hands: the top, middle and bottom. High five casino download.

Once you see how your hand measures up in this game, poker aficionados compare their regular poker hands.

The top contains only three cards but is scored as a regular hand; the bottom and middle are regular five-card hands.

Max four players, this poker game is most commonly played heads up.

Intrigued? checkout the articled listed below and learn more about the rounds, the scoring, scoring bonuses, and yes, Fantasyland.

Fun Poker Games To Play With Friends

Where to Play OFC Poker Games Online

So take a chance! Try your hand at these basic mixed poker games that you can play online or in person.

The best poker online is the poker you spend the most time mastering.

Play Free Poker Card Games

Most online poker sites will give you a quick free lesson if you're looking to play poker live and understand the mechanics of the game and who knows?

You could win some of the best tournaments around!

This article was first published by Katie Callahan in January 2017. Last update, March 2020.

  • Tags

    7 card StudBeginner strategyOmahaOnline PokerOpen Face ChineseTexas Holdem
Ten interesting variants for your neighbourhood poker get-togethers.

Turn on your TV and you'd think the only way to play poker is the boring Texas Hold ‘Em game. The big money tournaments have spurred an enormous growth in neighbourhood poker get-togethers (and lots of reckless online gambling), but if you just stick to the casino hold 'em games or the old standards (seven-card stud, five-card draw) you're missing out on a lot of fun. While I do agree with purists that some poker ‘variants' aren't poker at all, there are some great games that are poker, and which involve some intriguing strategy, bluffing, and even (gasp) cooperation. Or which are just plain fun. Here in Caledon our monthly get-together now has 18 players at three different tables (rotating at the breaks), so we've learned a lot of new games. Here are our current ten favourites:
  1. Do Ya: Like six-card stud, with a bunch of interesting wrinkles. Each player is dealt a single card face-down. All cards of that rank in that player's hand are considered wild, including the face-down one. The dealer starts with the player to his left, turns over the top card from the deck, and offers it to that player. If the player wants the card, he adds it to his hand, face-up. If he does not, the dealer turns a second card over. If the player does not want the second card, the dealer turns over a third card, and the player is forced to take it. The dealer then moves on to the second player to his left. If there are any face-up cards after the previous player's choice, the current player may take his pick of them. If he does not like any of them, the dealer turns over another card, just like with the first player. Once there are three face-up cards, the current player is always forced to take the third one. At the end of the round, any cards rejected by the last player are discarded, there's a betting round, and the whole process is repeated five more times until each player has one down and five up cards. Best hand wins. You can usually guess what each player has down (wild) after a couple of rounds, so players try to appeal to others to sacrifice by taking a card that would be wild to the next player even though it's of no value to them. The psychology can get interesting. The bluffing possibilities are extensive. And I've seen straight flushes lose. Note: we play this as a six-card game, one more than the standard.
  2. Pass the Trash / Anaconda: A delightfully aggravating seven-card stud variant. Each player is dealt seven cards face down, but must then (all players at once) pass three of them to the left (potentially breaking up a great natural hand). In the Anaconda variant, you then pass two more left and then one more left (all players at once) — though some dealers have the second and third passes going right, next-to-left, or across. A betting round follows. Now comes the piËce de rÈsistance — the ‘slow reveal'. Each player discards (face down) two cards and puts his five best cards in a pile in the order he plans to reveal them. Then all players at once reveal one card, followed by a betting round, and this is repeated four times until all cards are showing. The game can also be played high/low or lowball just to add to the mayhem. Or for a truly perverse variant, have the winner split the pot with the player to his right (the one who passed him the cards). The order of the reveal can disguise a good hand as a bad one or vice versa — for awhile. Three of a kind can often bluff out a flush.
  3. Guts: There are many variants of this game; here's the one we play: Ante, then each player gets five cards face down and looks at them. At the count of three, all players at the same time drop their hands if they're folding, keep them if they're staying in. Best hand wins the pot, worst hand of those staying in must match the pot. Deal passes left, ante and repeat the process (everyone's dealt back in, even if they folded the last round) until only one player stays in, and he wins the final big pot. If the deal goes all around without this happening (i.e. with only one player staying in) a final round is played with everyone staying in and a regular last betting round for the whole pot. If everyone folds in any round, the highest hand has to ante for everyone for the next round.
  4. Choose Your Own: Like seven-card stud, except you choose your own cards. Each player is dealt one card down and one card up, followed by a betting round. Then a kitty equal to one card per player is dealt face up in the middle, and starting with the lowest card showing, each player in turn picks a card from the kitty. After another betting round repeat the kitty deal and selection starting with the lowest hand showing, until each player has seven cards (one down, six up). The order of choice tends to keep everyone in until the bitter end.
  5. Countdown: A minor quirky variant of seven-card stud in which the denomination of the wild card equals the number of players still in. You are not permitted to fold (and hence change the wild card denomination) unless you would have to pay money to the pot to stay in. So if you have a mitt-full of deuces down, you bet like crazy and try to force all but one other player out. But if you have a mitt-full of deuces up, the other players won't bite.
  6. Follow the Queen, Bitch: A home-grown combination of two seven-card stud variants. In Follow the Queen, all queens are wild and the denomination dealt (face up) immediately after a queen is also wild, unless another queen is subsequently turned up, in which case the denomination dealt immediately after that queen is wild instead. If the last card dealt up is a queen, only queens are wild. If no queen is dealt up, or if the Queen of Spades (the Bitch) is dealt up, all hands are thrown in, the pot stays, only players who did not fold are dealt in and ante for the next round, and this continues until a round is dealt that contains at least one queen dealt up but not the Queen of Spades. In a seven-player game, at least one throw-in is likely and pots can get large.
  7. Threes Call:A variant of seven-card stud in which the recipient of the last ‘3' dealt face up gets to declare whether the game is regular (high hand wins) or lowball. As each ‘3' is turned up, the recipient must immediately declare regular or lowball, which makes the decision more complicated for the recipient of the next ‘3'.
  8. Diablo: A variant of five-card draw. Deuces are wild, and you can only draw up to two cards each. The wrinkle is that after the winner has collected the pot, if the person who opened didn't win, he has to pay into the pot a penalty of twice the ante times the total number of players — The deal then rotates left, another hand is dealt to those who didn't fold, they re-ante and play for the pot including the penalty. Rounds continue until the person who opens wins the pot. If no one opens a round, cards are thrown in and deal rotates.
  9. No-Peek: Purists hate this game, but it is suspenseful and can build some great pots. Each player is dealt seven cards (nine if there are five players or less), which are left face down and unseen by anyone. Player to left of dealer turns over a card, and each player around the table after that flips cards until they beat the highest hand showing on the table, which sets off a betting round. As each player runs out of cards without topping the best hand showing, he folds. There is no betting round after folds. This game can be played with wildcard variations, such as Woolworths (5s and 10s wild, 4s get an extra card from the deck, black 3s eliminate you from play) or Night Baseball (3s and 9s wild, 3s have to match the pot or fold, 4s get an extra card from the deck).
  10. Aviation: This is a less-boring variation of Texas Hold ‘Em. Each player gets four cards face down instead of the usual two. Each player must discard one card before the flop and another immediately after the flop. After that, usual Hold ‘Em rules apply.

We play with low stakes, modest limits and very lenient house rules. It's mostly couples, though spouses traditionally start at separate tables. Winners at the time of the 10pm snack-break rotate to a different table. The cards speak, so if you don't notice that your hand is the winning one, you still win. As you can tell, we go for games with suspense and drama rather than those requiring machismo or great skill.

At the end of the evening we traditionally play a decidedly non-poker winner-takes-all game called Chase the Ace to allow losers to recoup their losses. Ace is low in this game. Each player places three one-dollar chips in front of them. First dealer gives each player one card down. Starting to dealer's left, each player can choose to ‘stay' or to trade their card with the person on their left. Player to the left must trade unless they have a king, in which case they show the king immediately. When the trading gets back around to the dealer, he can choose to ‘stay' or to trade his card for a card he cuts from the deck. Cards are revealed and player(s) with the lowest denomination lose and must pay one dollar chip to the pot. Deal passes to left and rounds continue until all players except one are eliminated (run out of their three chips). That player wins the substantial pot. It's a game that's mostly luck, but it can be very suspenseful.

Fun Poker Games To Play At Home

And that's how we spend one Friday evening each month, when we're not trying to save the world and stuff.





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