The poker odds calculators on CardPlayer.com let you run any scenario that you see at the poker table, see your odds and outs, and cover the math of winning and losing poker hands. Texas Hold'em Omaha.
Is there an easy to remember strategy?
In AC, I play UTH, but my local casino added Texas Hold 'em Bonus instead. What's the general opinion of this game? I've played it a couple times, but didn't really enjoy it much, I played even for half an hour and cashed out.
Is there an easy to remember strategy?
2-3 Unsuited
2-4 Unsuited
2-5 Unsuited
2-6 Unsuited
2-7 Unsuited
3-4 Unsuited
Everything else plays. If your two cards are suited, you play.
You raise on the turn in the following circumstances:
The cards in the flop improve your hand (Any Pair or better even 2s or 3s)
Your hole cards are A-10 or better OR a pair of 4s or better.
You have an outside straight or four to a flush.
You raise the river in the following circumstances:
The cards in the flop and turn improve your hand (Any Pair or better even 2s or 3s)
Your hole cards are A-10 or better OR a pair of 4s or better.
I have been lucky playing by those rules but pictured below is proof that I do not follow my own rules 100% of the time:
Notice that I didn't bet the turn when I should have.
CON: I don't like THB because you have to put out 3x the min on almost every hand (folding only the very worst x2 hands). You are often putting out the flop bet with a terrible hand. When you do hit a good hand, you can only risk 1 + 1 more bets.
PRO: I do like the multiple decision points that keep you thinking at every street.
CON: I really don't like the bonus bet, because I get harassed for not playing it.
UTH:
PRO: You put out lots of money when you have a good hand, that feels like good poker to me, and makes me feel better about betting my money.
CON: with a 4x hand, you only have 1 decision point (although you are usually happy to sit back and wait for your payday)
PRO: You can safely not play trips, because when it does pay, you usually are getting paid on your main bets anyway, so people don't call you names.
THB's cons are UTH's pros. I much prefer UTH for my -EV carny play.
http://wizardofodds.com/games/texas-hold-em-bonus/
The Element of Risk is good as long as the ante pays on straights. This looks very important to confirm. The strategy is simple to start out, not sure why there is no advice after that. Good poker sense rules?
seems like a lot of your decisions revolve around whether you have a good kicker or not.
If I make it to WoV II, they might have this game going [they have it acc to website]
In AC, I play UTH, but my local casino added Texas Hold 'em Bonus instead. What's the general opinion of this game? I've played it a couple times, but didn't really enjoy it much, I played even for half an hour and cashed out.
Your local casino's management sounds like idiots. Please forgive me if the inventor of THB actually posts here.
Your local casino's management sounds like idiots.
Texas Holdem Bonus seems to have made a case to at least 2 casinos around PA/WV to have said game instead of UTH, I suspect more than 2. Unfortunately Meadows at least has gone for the shittier pay on the antie [needs flush].
Maybe the other selling point is the simplicity for the dealers. There is no qualifying hand for the dealer; less confusing situations seem to arise where one bet pushes, the other loses, the other wins even though no qualifier etc. I keep telling myself I have to watch for such dealer error in UTH, or don't play, should I ever do so.
'If the dealer has the higher hand the player will lose all wagers, except possibly the Bonus bet' per WoO site. The Ante bet wins or pushes if the player has won the hand, not too hard to remember.
What about the Bonus bet, you say? It has to be much easier to think of as an independent side bet.
I have not had the opportunity to play it or UTH, so there's that.
PS: I'm not sure where the dealer edge is! What am I missing? Essentially the dealer is stuck calling all your bets, you are stuck calling only your initial bets.
The way I see it it THB is a 2 card game, while UTH is a 7 card game. As described, THB pays even money across the board, only on the Ante with either a straight or flush, and better. It seems to be the money to be won in the game is the bonus bet, any pair or Ace/Face paying out. Gets me to thinking, what about a 5$ ante and 5$ bonus bet strategy, no winner? fold it. Winner ? tuck it and collect. At least one of my area casinos will allow you to play the bonus with out paying to see the flop, ect. Just ante and bonus bet.
UTH on the other hand, will pay you odds on a made hand straight or better on the blind, and trips and better on the.... wait for it..... trips bet. Again my local joints will allow you to 'fold' the play bets and only play the trips bet if you feel the dealer will beat your hand, even holding a paying trips bet.
Example: 4 to a flush on the board for community cards, and your stuck holding the 2 of said suit. You feel dealer has the flush as well, beating yours. Just tuck the cards under the trips bet, and fold the ante/blind bet.
While the trips bet is a sucker bet, according to the numbers, it seems to me that everyone I see not playing it almost always walks away poorer than they sat down, and the suckers winning money always seem to be on the trips.
I have had some absolutely absurd luck on the trips bet. Considering I play about 40 hands a month of the game, I have managed to hit 2 royals, 3 straight flushes, and 5 or 6 quads, all with a 2 unit bet up. Im normally a nickle a spot guy at the game, but occasionally just for S & G, bet a dime on each. All of those hands have been made on the turn/river never on the flop. I cannot count the number of other trips bet winners. Just absurd luck, pure and simple.
Thanks!!
Administrator
The optimal bet is $0.00. But if your going to play it, I say table minimum.
I sort of agree. The trips bet is a lot of fun, so to me that has value. I try to help pay for it by keeping to table minimum, and playing at least 2x that amount on the ante. I'd prefer to play 3x, but my br won't support that at the moment, with properly aggressive betting averaging about $65/hand, not including the $5 trips. But unless you're running bonus hot, it's a steady drain on your funds, and most of your overall win usually comes from the main game.
A better strategy is probably to be extremely aggressive with the finer points of 4x, 2x, and kicker bets with those same dollars. Plenty of adrenaline rush in a 50.1% 4-bet.
Perhaps it would be better to position my question more along the lines of bankroll management. Yes, I could avoid trips completely, but call me crazy, call me a wildman, call me the casino's best friend, but I like having the additional chance with each hand. So I started to think of it in terms of the question I asked - Is there a sweet spot bet that will give me an acceptable return when I hit, but also an acceptable loss when I don't. I'm not a big player, so I've been playing 25A / 25B / 10T as an example. So it takes 5 hands for the trips bet to equal 2 antes / blinds.
I'm not proficient in all of the calculations of odds, probabilities, risk of ruin etc. but common sense tells me that risk of ruin would go down, but to what degree.
One other thing, I think the bankroll size be 20X the combined ante/blind (no trips). Thoughts on that?
Please feel free to math the hell out of this and help me learn the calcs. And thank you.
What pay table does the casino you play at use for the trips bet?
Most are 50-40-30-8-7-4-3beachbumbabs
Administrator
Wizard Of Odds Texas Holdem Calculator Free
Most are 50-40-30-8-7-4-3
I'm seeing a lot of 6-5 lately (the rest the same). I like the one above better, though.
I'm seeing a lot of 6-5 lately (the rest the same). I like the one above better, though.
The 6 5 is a better pay table than the 7 4.
All else being equal.
Administrator
The 6 5 is a better pay table than the 7 4.
All else being equal.
I think it's how I'm running. I get a lot of flushes lately. But the extra 5 on straights is nice on the other one, too.