Texas Holdem Rules
In a full ring game, Texas Hold'em is played with a
standard 52-card deck and as many as 10
participants. A dealer "button" is used to indicate
the position of the player who would be dealing the
cards if the players were actually dealing the cards
themselves. The player holding the button acts last
and thus has a positional advantage that remains
throughout the hand. After each hand, the button is
moved one position clockwise, so that all players in
the game have, after a full round, had exactly the
same number of opportunities to hold positional
advantage.
Holding the button is an advantage, because as the player to act last, you have more
information available to you when your turn to bet arrives. For exactly the same reasons,
being forced to act first is a disadvantage. The players acting in the middle are, as you
might imagine, somewhere in-between on the advantage/disadvantage scale; the later
you act, the better your position.

The two players on the button's immediate left must post "blind" bets...that is, amounts
they place in the pot before they see their cards. Typically, the player in the very first
position posts a blind bet one-half the size of the player in the second position, although
in some games, the first bet (called the "small blind") may be as little as one-third or as
much as two-thirds the size of the second bet (called the "big blind").

All participants in the Texas Hold'em game are now dealt two cards face down. These
cards belong exclusively to their "owners," and are not seen by the other players at any
time until the showdown at the end of the hand. A round of betting takes place during this
point, which is called "before the flop" or "pre-flop."

In the pre-flop betting round, the player in third position has only three choices. Because
a blind wager has already been made, the player can do any of the following:

Fold. If the third player folds, he is out of the hand permanently, and cannot participate
again until the next deal of the cards (when, because of the way the button moves around
the board, he will be the big blind)
Call, by matching the size of the big blind; or
Raise. How much the player can raise depends on whether the game is limit, pot-limit, or
no-limit. For ease of discussion, we will assume the game played in our sample hand is
Limit
Texas Hold'em poker, with $5 and $10 blinds, which means it is a "10-20 game."
If he calls, he places $10 in the pot. If he raises, he places $20 in the pot.

The action continues in clockwise fashion around the table, with each player in turn
having the option to fold, call or raise. If the third or another player has raised, the player
who acts after the raiser must now decide whether he wishes to call $20, or raise to $30.
There is a limit on the number of raises per round; in some casinos, the limit is three
raises, and in some, it is four raises. UltimateBet.com uses the 4-raise rule.

Let us assume that the third player does indeed raise to $20, and that everyone else folds
until the button, who calls for $20. Now, the player in the small blind must decide if he is
going to call for $15, or raise to $25 (because he already had $5 in the pot). If he calls,
the big blind must decide if he is going to call for $10 or raise another $10. If no one had
raised the player in the big blind would have an opportunity to raise, called "the option,"
because he was forced to bet his original $10 without having looked at his cards.


With the pre-flop betting complete, the dealer now deals out three cards face-up. In
Texas Hold'em, these "community" cards belong to everyone, and these three cards are
called "the flop." To see how the community card feature works, if your "personal" cards
are Queen-Jack, and the flop comes Q-5-4, you have a pair of Queens with a Jack "kicker"
(secondary card). In Texas Hold'em this isn't a bad position, unless someone else has a
hand like King-Queen, in which case you both have a pair of Queens, but you are losing,
because the other player has a better kicker. A second round of betting follows.

In the second betting round, the player closest to the left of the button, who is still in the
hand, acts first. Unlike the first betting round, though, where the options were "call, raise
or fold," now the options are:

Check, which means to decline to wager now but to retain the option to call or raise bets
made by other players; or
Bet, in this case, because of the game's structure, $10.
Why this difference? On the first round, the blind money was placed in the pot to give the
players a reason to play. If there were no blinds in Texas Hold'em, there would be very
little incentive for a player to enter a hand without the absolute best possible cards,
because there would be nothing to win. As the first player in, you would be risking your
$10 bet to win nothing; the only way you could win something would be if someone after
you decided to call or raise your bet, and one would assume that the player after you,
knowing that you had a strong hand (because you were the first to bet) would only raise or
call with a strong hand himself).

The blinds thus give players something to shoot at, a reason to play with something less
than the best hand. But once we reach the flop, there is already money in the pot, so
there is no longer a need for blinds, and the first player can choose to bet $10, or to
check.

It is possible in Texas Hold'em, and indeed happens reasonably often, that all players still
in the hand will check, meaning that there is no betting action on the flop. But if
someone bets, the players must decide whether they are going to call or raise, and the
same limit on the number of raises in a round applies.

After the third round betting concludes, the dealer reveals a fourth community card,
which, in Texas Hold'em, is called "the Turn" or "Fourth Street." In limit Texas Hold'em
poker, the size of the betting amount now doubles, to $20 (which is why this game is
called a "10-20" game). The greater bet size aside, the process of betting and checking is
identical to that on the flop.

After this third round of betting concludes, the dealer reveals the fifth and final
community card, called "the River," or "Fifth Street". Betting is identical to the pattern
used on the third (Turn) round.


At the end of this fourth round of betting, any players still remaining in the hand turn their
cards over. (If at any point during the hand, one player makes a bet that all others decline
to call, the hand is over immediately, and the player who made the final wager takes the
pot without the need to show his cards.)

In Texas Hold'em, the player who can assemble the best five-card hand, out of the seven
possible (the two in their hands and the five in the middle) wins the pot. The players can
thus use two, one, or none of their "private" first two cards. Although it is unusual to use
none of one's private cards, it is possible, if the five cards on the board form a strong hand
such as a straight, flush, or full house.

If, for example, two players remained in the Texas Hold'em hand at the end, one of whose
private cards were two kings (K-K), and one of whose private cards were two aces (A-A),
and the board was 5-6-7-8-9, the players would split the pot, because each has exactly
the same nine-high straight. Before the river card, the player with the two aces had a very
large advantage, but the concluding nine cost him half the pot (as would have a
concluding Four, which also would have put a straight on the board).

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Source: Ultimatebet.com
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Texas Holdem Rules