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How to Play Pai Gow Poker
Short Description:
My-Casino-on-Net's Pai Gow (pronounced "pie-gow")
Poker is an exciting game of skill, which fuses the
ancient Chinese game of Pai Gow (meaning: "makes
nine"), and modern Poker. In Pai Gow Poker the
player competes, one on one, against the dealer. The
object of the game is for the player to arrange seven
dealt cards into two hands ("setting" the
cards). The seven cards must be set in such a way so
that the player's five-card ("High") hand
scores a higher value than the two-card ("Low")
hand. The player's High and Low hands must then have
a greater value (see Poker Hands Value Chart below)
than the dealer's High and Low hands.
Pai
Gow Rules:
The game is played with a standard 52-card deck, plus
a Joker (totaling 53 cards). (The Joker may be used
either as an Ace or to complete a Straight, Flush or
Straight Flush, only.) After placing their bet, the
players are each dealt seven cards. The players must
then set their cards into two separate hands. The first
hand, which must consist of 5 cards, is referred to
as the "High Hand", as it must have the highest
value of the two hands. The second hand, which consists
of the remaining two cards, is referred to as the "Low
Hand".
You
may ask the house to automatically set your cards by
pressing the "House Way" button.
The
goal of Pai Gow Poker is to beat both of the dealer's
hands, according to the standard Poker hand values rules
(see chart below). If both hands beat the dealer's hands,
the player receives "even money" on their
bet (minus a 5% vigorish or house commission). If both
of the player's hands lose against the dealer's hands,
the dealer takes the player's bet. If only one of the
player's two hands win, the round results in a tie or
"Push".
Winning
Combinations:
High
(Five-Card) Hand:
The Five-card Hand must have the highest rank of the
two hands. The object is to form the best rank for the
5-card hand, from the seven dealt cards.
Low
(Two-Card) Hand:
The Two card Hand must have the second-highest rank
of the two hands. The highest-ranking 2-card hand possible
is a pair of Aces. If the Two card Hand is not composed
of a pair, the value of the cards will determine the
hand's rank.
The
Wild Card:
The Wild Card is the Joker card, which can be substituted
only as a single Ace or to complete either a Flush,
Straight, or Straight Flush.
Copy
Hand:
When the player and the dealer compare hands that have
the same rank, the hand is referred to as a "Copy
Hand". In Pai Gow Poker, the dealer wins the Copy
Hand, as opposed to Blackjack, where a Copy Hand results
in a "Push".
Pai Gow Poker
Hands:
(in order of value) |
| 5 Aces (using
Wild Card) |
| Royal Flush |
| Straight Flush |
| Four of a Kind |
| Full House |
| Flush |
| *Straight |
| Three of a Kind |
| Two Pair |
| Ace |
| King |
| Queen |
| Jack |
| Ten, etc. |
*In
Pai Gow Poker there exists an exception when calculating
the value of a Straight (compared to common Poker Hand
Values). The highest valued Straight in Pai Gow Poker
is: A-K-Q-J-10 (as is true in Poker). However, in Pai
Gow Poker the second highest valued Straight is: A-2-3-4-5
(in Poker this is the lowest valued Straight). For example,
in Pai Gow Poker an A-2-3-4-5 Straight, beats a K-Q-J-10-9
Straight, but loses to a A-K-Q-J-10 Straight.
Table
limits:
Minimum
bet: $1.
Maximum bet: $250.
The
betting limits may change according to Casino Policy.
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