Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
An ace-high straight flush, such as A ♦ K ♦ Q ♦ J ♦ 10 ♦, is called a royal flush or royal straight flush and is the best possible hand in ace-high games when wild cards are not used. [ 5 ] [ 15 ] [ 16 ] A five-high straight flush, such as 5 ♥ 4 ♥ 3 ♥ 2 ♥ A ♥ , is called a steel wheel and is both the best low hand and ...
The royal flush is a case of the straight flush. It can be formed 4 ways (one for each suit), giving it a probability of 0.000154% and odds of 649,739 : 1. When ace-low straights and ace-low straight flushes are not counted, the probabilities of each are reduced: straights and straight flushes each become 9/10 as common as they otherwise would be.
Ranks above a straight or any dog, but below a Straight Flush House or big cat. [6] [2] Big cat (or big tiger): King high, eight low. It ranks just below a Straight Flush House, and above a straight or any other cat or dog. [6] [2] Some play that dog or cat flushes beat a straight flush, under the reasoning that a plain dog or cat beats a plain ...
Each one has an exact probability of 120 / 7776. Under these rules, a Straight beats a Full House (unlike in card poker, but correctly reflecting its probability) but does not beat a Four of a Kind (incorrectly reflecting its lower probability). A Flush beats a Four of a Kind (unlike in card poker, but correctly reflecting its lower probability).
A royal flush in hearts. A flush is a hand of playing cards where all cards are of the same suit. [1] There are different types of flush, including straight, where the flush is formed from a run of cards in unbroken sequence of ranks. Flushes are one of the types of scoring hand in poker.
four-flush Four cards of the same suit. A non-standard poker hand in some games, an incomplete drawing hand in most. See main article: four flush. four of a kind A hand containing four cards of equal rank. Also quads. See list of poker hands. four-straight Four cards in rank sequence; either an open-ender or one-ender.
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
In a stunning statistical improbability, Justin Phillips knocked out Motoyuki Mabuchi in the Main Event. Phillips held a Royal Flush, while Mabuchi held quad aces. One of the broadcasters, Lon McEachern, mentioned on air that the chances of such a showdown occurring were 1:2.7 billion.