Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Texas holdem- Introduction


Texas Hold'em

Texas hold 'em is a fast and exciting form of poker. The game is also surprisingly complex and requires a great deal of skill to play at the expert level. It's no wonder, then, that hold'em has rapidly become one of the most popular forms of poker in card rooms around the country.

To the uneducated eye, Texas hold'em appears to be very similar to seven-card stud, but in fact, there are several critical difference between the two games. To begin with, the starting hand decision in hold'em, though very important, is not the dominating factor that it is in stud. If you so not also play reasonably well on the later street, the best you can hope for in hols’em is to break even in the long run.

Hold’em is also more of a positional game than seven-card stud, because the order of betting does not change from round to round. In addition, a hold’em starting hand consists of just two cards instead of three cards. Have been dealt.

But perhaps the most important difference between the two games is that Texas hold’em uses community cards, which are dealt face up in the center of the table and part of each active player’s hand. This makes it much more difficult to draw out on an opponent. As an example, if you start with two kings, your opponent starts with two aces, and a pair appears on board, you both have two pair. When you make two pair in seven-card stud, you frequently will beat a lone higher pair. This does not occur as often in Texas hold’em.

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