Texas Hold'em (also known as Hold'em) is
the most popular poker game in the world. There are
three variations of Texas Hold'em, distinguished by
their betting limits:
- Limit Texas Hold'em (there is a
specified betting limit in each game and on each round
of betting)
- Pot Limit Texas Hold'em (A
player can bet what is in the pot).
- No Limit Texas Hold'em (A
player can bet all of his chips at any time).
Each of these
Hold'em variations are available on PartyPoker.com as
play for free (play money) or play for real.
Texas Hold'em: The Rules
Texas
Hold'em uses what is called a "dealer button" (a small
disc) to indicate the theoretical dealer of each hand.
After each hand is completed, the dealer button moves
clockwise to the next active player. This player will be
considered "the dealer" for that hand. In this way each
player has equal opportunities to be in early, middle
and late position.
Before the start of the game,
PartyPoker.com generates a fresh deck of cards for the
hand. Party Poker use a single deck of cards for each hand of
poker, where a deck refers to 52 cards (excluding
jokers). PartyPoker.com uses a Random
Number Generator (RNG) to shuffle each deck of cards
for the hand.
The First round of Texas
Hold'em:
The two players immediately to the left of
the dealer button place blind bets to start the
pot (similar in principle to an ante). The player to the
left of the dealer button posts the "small blind"
(usually equal to half the lower stake. At
PartyPoker.com the small blind is rounded down to the
nearest dollar. However, as it is just a guideline, the
amount of the small blind could be set slightly
differently).
The player to the left of the
small blind is required to post the "big blind,"
equal to the lower stake limit. All the blinds in
Hold'em poker are considered live bets and the players
who posted them will have the option of checking,
calling, raising or folding when the betting returns to
their position. Remember, the dealer button (and
therefore the small blind and the big blind) move around
the table clockwise after each hand, so each player will
post the blind bets over time.
Once the blinds
have been placed, two secret cards are dealt to each
player ("hole cards"), after which the first betting
round starts. The player to the left of the player who
placed the big blind starts the betting for this round.
Each player now has the option to place his bets
in the first round, which is set at the lower limit of
the stakes structure. (For example in a $10/$20 Hold'em
game, the value of each bet is $10 for the first round.
Therefore, when a user makes the move "bet," this is
equal $10, and "raise" is $20.a raise includes a call on
the previous bet placed and one additional bet.)
Bets can be placed by playing Bet,
Call or Raise. These options are available
depending on the action taken by the previous player.
Each player always has the option to fold. The
first player to act has the option to bet, call or
raise. Subsequent players have the option of calling or
raising. To call is to bet the same amount as the
previous player has bet. To raise is to match the
previous bet and increase the bet.
Every player
participating in the hand should have equal amounts of
money bet as the previous players (includes bets, calls
and raises). Until the time all the players have placed
equal amounts in the pot, the betting will continue.
There is a limit on the amount and the number of bets a
player can place during a betting round (four bets for
limit games).
After the first round of betting
is over, the Flop (the first three community
cards) is dealt. The community cards are common to all
the players participating in the hand.
The Second Round of Texas
Hold'em: After the Flop (and in each subsequent
betting round), the first active player left of the
dealer button is first to act. The second betting round
also limits the value of bets and raises to the lower
limit of the stake structure. So in a $10/$20 game, the
value of each bet is $10 for the second round.
Bets can be placed by playing Bet, Call and
Raise. These options are available to each player
depending on the action taken by the previous player.
The first player to act in this round (the player left
to the button) gets the option to bet or to check (to
refrain from betting.this is only available if no bet
has yet been made in the betting round). Once a player
has bet, subsequent players will get the Call and Raise
options only.
After this the fourth community
card is dealt; this is known as the Turn.
The Third Round of Texas
Hold'em: The third betting round starts again with
the player left to the button, bets and raises are
limited to the upper limit of the stake structure (in a
$10/$20 game, $20 is the upper stake.therefore, a single
bet in this instance is $20, and a raise is $40 -
includes a call on the previous bet and one additional
bet). Bets can be placed by playing any of the following
options - Bet, Call and Raise. Combinations of these
options are available to the player depending on the
action taken by the previous player.
After this
the fifth and final community card is dealt; this is
known as the River.
The Fourth Round of Texas
Hold'em: The fourth (and final) betting round starts
again with the player left to the button, bets and
raises are limited to the upper limit of the stake
structure (in a $10/$20 game, $20 is the upper stake).
Bets can be placed by playing any of the following
options - Bet, Call and Raise. Combinations of these
options are available to the player depending on the
action taken by the previous player.
Once all
the bets have been made, there are two possible
outcomes: either all the players but one have folded
(and hence that person wins the pot), or the remaining
players reveal their hands and the best hand wins the
pot.
The game play remains same for both
No-Limit and Pot-Limit Texas Hold'em game with a few
exceptions to the rules mentioned above:
In
limit Texas Hold'em a maximum of four bets is allowed
per player during any betting round. This includes a (1)
bet, (2) raise, (3) re-raise, and (4) cap, but in
No-Limit Texas Hold'em and Pot-Limit Texas Hold'em there
is no limit to the number of raises that a player can
make. The only limit is that you cannot raise yourself.
If all the other players in the hand only call or fold,
the player would not get an option to raise, because the
last raise was done by him.
The betting
structure is the same at the play for free tables.
Betting
Structure for No-Limit Texas Hold'em Poker
Minimum
raise: The raise amount must be at least as much as
the previous bet or raise in the same round. As an
example, if the first player to act bets $100 then the
second player must raise a minimum of $100 (total bet of
$200). Maximum eligible raise: The size of
your stack (your chips on the table)
The betting
structure is the same at the play for free tables.
The Betting
Rules for Pot-Limit Texas Hold'em Poker
Minimum
eligible raise: The raise amount must be at least as
much as the previous bet or raise in the same round. As
an example, if the first player to act bets $100 then
the second player must raise a minimum of $100 (total
bet of $200). Maximum eligible raise: The
size of the pot, which is defined as the total of the
active pot (which can be either the main pot or the side
pot depending on whether anyone has gone "all-in") plus
all bets on the table plus the amount the active player
must first call before raising.
As an example,
if the active pot is $200 and the first player to act in
the round bets $150 and the next player calls $150, the
third player has a maximum eligible total bet of $800.
The $800 total is made up of the $150 call and $650
raise. The $650 max raise portion is equal to the
pot of $200 + first player's $150 + second player's $150
+ his own call of $150.
Pot-Limit and No-Limit
Games will be raked according to the chart below:
No. Of players |
Rake per pot |
Max. |
2-3 |
$0.05 for each $1.0 in Pot |
$1.00 |
4-5 |
$0.05 for each $1.0 in Pot |
$2.00 |
6-9 |
$0.05 for each $1.0 in Pot |
$3.00 |
The betting structure is the same at the play for free tables.
Note: If rake is less than $0.10, rake is zero.

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