Online Pai Gow Poker
Pai Gow Poker Game Rules
Pai
Gow Poker combines elements of the ancient
Chinese game of
pai gow
and the American game of
poker. The game is played with a traditional
deck of 52 playing cards plus one joker. The joker can be used only as
an ace or to complete a straight, flush, straight flush, or a royal flush.
For online pai gow poker games, we recommend
Hampton Casino,
Casino Miami Beach,
Portofino Casino, or
Sci-Fi Casino.
Ranking the Hands
Each player at the table is dealt seven cards which the player arranges
to make two hands, a two-card hand and a five-card hand. Pai Gow
Poker is essentially two separate poker hands according to traditional
poker rankings. Thus, the highest two-card hand would be two aces, and the
highest five-card hand is five aces (four aces and the joker). The
five-card hand must be equal to or higher than the two-card hand.
Poker Hand Rankings
| Five-Card Hand |
Two-Card Hand |
Five Aces Royal Flush
Straight Flush
4 of a Kind
Full House
Flush
Straight
3 of a Kind
2 Pair
High Card
|
One Pair
High Card |
Object of the Game
The object of the game is for both of your hands to rank higher than
both of your opponent's hands. Your five-card hand must rank higher than
your opponent's five-card hand, and your two-card hand must rank higher
than your opponent's two-card hand. tie.
Ties are also called copy hands, and whoever is banker wins all
copy hands.
If you win one hand but lose the other, this is considered a
push.
In push hands, no money exchanges hands.
Winning hands are paid even money,
less a 5% commission. Losing hands lose the money wagered.
Playing the Game
The house
dealer or any player may be the banker. All players bet
against the bank. The bank is offered to each player and each
player
may accept or pass, in which case the bank is offered to the next
player. The dealer will always take the bank in turn, then all
players
are again offered the bank until the dealer banks again. In order for a player to be the bank, the player must have placed a wager against the
dealer the last time the dealer was the bank, and the player must have
sufficient gaming chips on the table to cover all of the wagers at the
table for that round of play. The banker will be identified by a white
plastic marker. A player who is the bank may use the option to have the
casino cover 50% of the winning wagers; this is known as
"co-banking." Co-Banking is identified by a red plastic
marker.
A dice cup containing three dice is shaken by the
banker to determine
who receives the first card (the dealer announces no more bets and then
shakes the dice). As an alternative to using the shaker and dice, the
casino may use a computerized random number generator to
determine the starting position. In pai gow poker,
position is always 1,
8 or 15. The dealer counts from the banker's position. The cards will
then be dealt by the dealer in front of each betting area regardless if
there is a player, in a clockwise rotation from the starting point
indicated by the dice.
Each player then arranges their cards into a two-card hand and a
five-card hand. The house dealer does not look at the cards until all
players and/or player/banker have set their hands in the designated
spaces face down. The house dealer then turns their cards over and sets
their hand in front of the tray face up. The player/banker's hand is
compared to the dealer's hand first.
Winning hands are left laying face up next to the betting circle.
For losing hands, the wager is picked up by the dealer and the cards are
placed in the discard holder. If the player wins one hand and loses the
other, this is considered a push. No money exchanges hands and the cards
are placed in the discard holder.
Rules to Remember
Each player at the table
is responsible for setting his hand and no other person except the
dealer may touch the cards of that player. Each player is required to keep the seven cards in full
view of the dealer at all times. Once the player has set a high and low
hand and placed the two hands face down on the layout, the player may
not touch the cards again.
Players are not allowed to show their hands or talk to other
players
about their hands before all cards are exposed.
Any player's hand that is set incorrectly (e.g., the two-card hand ranks
higher than the five-card hand, or the player puts three cards in one
hand and four cards in the other) is an automatic loser. Players are
responsible for arranging their own hands and should do so with care.
Neither the house bank nor the player bank may set an automatic losing hand.
The hand must be reset according to the house way.

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