Poker Quads Vs Full House
PSC Bahamas - Quads vs Full House! BestPokerVids (576,231 Views) 3,206 Views. Youtube Poker Hands. On January 15, 2017. If you love poker. Full house; Four of a kind (sometimes called “quads”) Straight flush. If you have no pair, three of a kind, straight, flush, full house, etc., then the highest card in your hand is considered to be decisive. The hand above, in which the best card is a king and there is no other combination of poker hand, is known as “king high”. PokerStars operates the world's most popular online poker sites, serving a global poker community of more than 63 million registered members. Since it launched in 2001, PokerStars has become the first choice of the world's top players, with more daily tournaments than anywhere else and with the best security online.
Poker Quads Vs Full House For Sale
Any help you can provide?
Odds are 100% I think.
For the way it was worded, that's a great reply.But for a real answer, I suggest Naomi read the following page:
http://wizardofodds.com/games/texas-hold-em/bad-beat-jackpots/
For the way it was worded, that's a great reply.
But for a real answer, I suggest Naomi read the following page:
That won't even help. That page is just for bad beats for hands of a minimum rank (with both hole cards) beaten by any higher hand (with both hole cards).
This would require a new tedious calculation, unfortunately.
Since I am math illiterate I can't tell you or explain it to you. But I remember seeing some report somewhere that said the odds of it happening at your table are something like one in forty-thousand hands or about the odds of hitting a royal flush.
I have been at a jackpot table about six or seven times in the past 8 years or so. I have never been the winner or loser in a jackpot situation.
edited to add: found this on the web http://www.pokerlistings.com/strategy/general-poker/the-truth-about-bad-beat-jackpots
Yes, I understand if a player has aces full of kings, quad jacks or higher will definitely beat the hand. What I am looking for is the odds behind actually having those hands dealt.
Easy answer: not good...lol
Hard answer: It depends on a few factors. The biggest factors are: How many players are at the table? Do both hole cards have to be used? Technically it also matters on players' playing style (how often they fold preflop). This last factor is often ignored though because it can't easily be easily quantified. Without telling us these things, it's pretty difficult for us to give you a reasonable answer.
Poker Quads Vs Full House Plans
Both hole cards must be used in the hands.
I can't speak to the playing style, as it will differ.
Within each of those two, there are various options for suited board cards such that you'd be able to get beaten with a royal. But for each, just go through each configuration and figure out how many hands beat it. There aren't so many to make it prohibitive to do it by hand. For example:
Pocket AA, Board AKKXY:
a) if X=Y and the opponent has the other two, you lose. For the ranks you care about, that can only happen with J or Q, not A or K.
b) if X and Y are suited to either A or K and within straight range, you can lose to a straight flush
c) if X or Y are suited to A and one K and are Q/J/T, you can lose to a royal flush.
Obviously there are some overlaps in the above so you'll need to factor those out. But that's basically how to do it, assuming you're only talking about one player beating another.