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Ranked poker hands, odds of being dealt them, and How
many ways there to create a certain poker hand.
Listed here for you are the different
poker hands, ranked from greatest to least, and the chances of
getting any of them. We've omitted Five of a Kind, since this
hand is only made with wild cards, and frankly, we find that
kind of odds calculation too exhausting.
You must assume, for the chart Odds of Getting These Poker
Hands, that the odds apply to a pat hand -- the original 5
cards a player was dealt, before he replaces any of his cards.
The true odds of getting a particular poker hand change
dramatically once you discard and replace, and they change with
the particular poker game or variation you're playing. For a
clue to how much, look at the difference between how the 5 and
the 7-card games, in how many ways it is possible to make up a
Straight Flush. In a 50-card game, there are 40. In a 7-card
game, it jumps to 41,584.
1. Royal Flush: This hand is
a Straight (five cards in succession, like 2-3-4-5-6) AND a
Flush (all cards of the same suit) which has an Ace high,
meaning its highest card is the Ace, and includes King,
Queen, Jack, 10. It is the highest Straight Flush possible.
2. Straight Flush: Five cards
in order, all of the same suit. There is one kind not
permitted; and that is using the Ace in the middle of a
straight.
3. Four of a Kind: A poker
hand including Four cards of the same rank, like four Jacks.
If two players in a game each had Four of a Kind, the higher
four wins.
4. Full House: A poker hand
consisting of a pair and three of a kind. If two players had
Full Houses, the player who had the higher three of a kind
wins.
5. Flush: A poker hand in
which all cards are of the same suit, either all Diamonds, all
Hearts, etc. If two players had Flushes, the one with the
highest card in his hand wins.
6. Straight: A hand of five
cards that may be of different suits but running in ranking
order, such as 4-5-6-7-8.
7. Three of a Kind: A hand
including Three cards of the same rank, as in K-K-K-4-7. If a
second player has Three of a Kind, the higher ranking set of
three cards wins.
8. Two Pair: A hand
including two cards of the same rank, and two cards of another
rank, such as 6-6-2-10-10. If another player had Two Pair,
the one with the highest ranking pair wins.
9. Pair: A hand including two
cards of the same rank, as in 8-8-K-2-Q. If a pair is the best
hand, and more than one player has a pair, the highest rank
pair wins; if two players have the same pair, such as
3-3-K-7-4, and 3-3-8-A-6, the one with the highest other card
besides the pair wins. In this example, the one with the Ace
in his hand wins.
10. High Card: When no one has
a pair or any other better hand, the one with the highest card
wins. If more than one has that high card, then the second
highest wins. Or third highest, if more than one player has
the same two highest cards.
Odds of Getting These Poker Hands in
Games Using 5 Cards
Royal Flush 1: 649,739
Straight Flush 1: 72,192
Four of a Kind 1: 4,164
Full House 1: 693
Flush 1: 508
Straight 1: 254
Three of a Kind 1: 46
Two Pair 1: 20
One Pair 1: 4
No-Pair Hand 1: 2
Ways To Make These Poker Hands in
Games Using:
5 Cards 7 Cards
Straight Flush 40 41,584
Four of a Kind 624 224,848
Full House 3,744 3.473,184
Flush 5,108 4,047,644
Straight 10,200 6,180,020
Three of a Kind 54,912
6,461,620
Two Pair 123,552 31,433,400
One Pair 1,098,240 58,627,800 |