Overview
Pai Gow Poker is a card game played
with a 53-card deck—a standard deck of 52 cards
and one Joker. In this version of Pai Gow Poker,
the banker (or house) always plays as the dealer and
covers all bets, and the player only competes against
the dealer. The player receives seven cards,
which must then be “set” or split into
two poker hands: a five-card hand and a two-card
hand. Once split, the player’s two hands
are compared with the dealer’s two hands to
determine the winner. The bank pays the winner—minus
a 5% commission—and the game ends.
The Deal
For each game, the dealer shuffles
the deck and deals out seven cards into each hand—the
dealer’s cards remain unknown. The player
must then “set” or split their seven cards
into two poker hands: a five-card hand and a
two-card hand.
Splitting cards and rules on
the Joker
Pai Gow Poker places only one restriction
upon splitting the initial seven cards: the
five-card hand must have a higher poker rank than
the two-card hand. The only other twist during
the game is how to play the Joker. The Joker
can be used to complete a five-card flush, straight,
or straight flush. Otherwise, the Joker counts
as an ace.
Ranking The Hands
The hands are ranked according
to standard poker rules with one exception:
the Ace-2-3-4-5 straight is the second highest straight.
Straights rank, from highest to lowest: Ace-K-Q-J-10,
Ace-2-3-4-5, K-Q-J-10-9 … 6-5-4-3-2. Also,
keep in mind that the best two-card hand is a pair
of aces; the two-card hand cannot have a flush (since
a flush requires five cards).
Determining The Winner
The player’s two hands are
compared with the dealer’s two hands to determine
the winner. If both the player’s five-card
hand and two-card hand has a higher poker rank than
both the dealer’s hands (5 card and 2 card),
the player wins. If both of the dealer’s
hands beat both of the player’s hands, the dealer
wins. If either the player or the dealer wins
only one of the two hands, the game is a push and
neither the dealer nor the player wins. When
either the five-card hands or the two-card hands rank
exactly the same, the equal hands are called “copies”
of each other. The dealer wins all copy hands.
For example, if the player beats the dealer in the
five-card hand but copies the dealer with the two-card
hand, the game is a push.
The Payout
When the player’s two hands
beat the dealer’s two hands, the player wins
an amount equal to the original bet minus a 5% commission.
When the dealer’s two hands beat the player’s
two hands, the banker wins the player’s original
bet. Finally, when the game ends in a push,
neither player nor dealer wins, and the player keeps
the original bet.
Pai
Gow Poker Differences - Physical vs. Online
| Physical: |
Players
may play more than one hand when sitting at
a Pai Gow table with fewer players than hands.
The extra hands are called “dragon”
hands. |
| Online: |
The
player may play only one hand; dragon hands
are not supported. |
| Physical: |
A player may choose to be the banker and must
cover all winning bets. |
| Online: |
The dealer is always the banker. |
| Physical: |
Splitting
the seven-card hand incorrectly so the two-card
hand has a higher poker rank than the five-card
hand forfeits the game. |
| Online: |
The player may re-split the hand. The
game only continues when the five-card hand
has a higher poker rank than the two-card hand. |
| Physical: |
The player can ask the house for help when deciding
how to split the hand. The house would
then show how it would split the hand. |
| Online: |
The online version does not support asking the
house for help. |
Pai
Gow Poker Hand Ranks (highest to lowest)
The hands are ranked according
to standard poker rules with one exception:
the Ace-2-3-4-5 straight is the second highest straight.
Straights rank, from highest to lowest: Ace-K-Q-J-10,
Ace-2-3-4-5, K-Q-J-10-9 … 6-5-4-3-2. The
best two-card hand is a pair of aces; the two-card
hand cannot have a flush (since a flush requires five
cards).
| Hand Name |
Description |
Example |
| Five
of a Kind |
4
aces plus the Joker |
AS,
AH, AD, AC, Joker |
| Royal
Flush |
10,
J, Q, K, A of same suit |
10H,
JH, QH, KH, AH |
| Straight
Flush |
In
sequence, 5 cards of same suit |
3S,
4S, 5S, 6S, 7S |
| Four
of a Kind |
4
cards of same rank |
6D,
6S, 6C, 6H |
| Full
House |
3
of a kind, plus a pair |
2H,
2D, 2S, 3H, 3S |
| Flush |
5
cards of same suit |
2D,
4D, 6D, 8D, 9D |
| Straight |
5
cards in sequence |
3H,
4C, 5H, 6S, 7D |
| Three
of a Kind |
3
cards of same rank |
7H,
7S, 7D |
| Two
Pair |
2
pairs of different rank |
4H,
4S, 6D, 6S |
| One
Pair |
1
pair (2 cards) of same rank |
KD,
KH |
| High
Card |
5
cards of different ranks and suits |
AH,
KS, 10D, 5C, 2 |
Pai
Gow Poker Interface
Deal
Clicking on the deal button after
placing the initial bet starts a new game.
Split
After selecting two cards to place
into the two-card hand, clicking the split button
arranges the seven cards into two hands—a five-card
hand and a two-card hand—and continues the game.
To better see all possible ways to split the initial
seven cards, re-arrange the hand by dragging cards
to different locations.
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