Encyclopedia > Poker Stripped deck

  Article Content

Stripped deck

Redirected from Poker/Stripped deck

Some poker games are played with a deck that has had certain cards removed, usually low-ranking ones. For example, the Australian game of Manila uses a 32-card deck in which all cards below the rank of 7 are removed, and Mexican stud is played with the 8s, 9s, and 10s removed from the deck (and a joker added). This may require adjusting hand values: in both of these games, a flush ranks above a full house, because having fewer cards of each suit available makes flushes rarer.

A hand such as 6-7-J-Q-K plays as a straight in Mexican stud, skipping over the removed ranks. Some places may allow a hand such as 10-9-8-7-A to play as a straight (by analogy to a wheel) in the 32-card game, the A playing low and skipping over the removed ranks (this is not the case in Manila, tough). Finally, the relative frequency of straights versus three of a kind is also sensitive the deck composition (and to the number of cards dealt), so some places may play that trips beat a straight, but the difference is small enough that this complication isn't necessary for most games.

Five-card stud is often played with a stripped deck as well, usually the same 32-card deck as Manila (with all cards of rank 2 through 6 removed). In lively home games it might work better to only strip three ranks (2s through 4s) if you have seven or eight players; with only two or three players you can strip 7s and 8s as well, leaving only a 24-card deck. In any of these cases, a flush should rank above a full house (in the 24-card case it's actually more rare than four of a kind, but is rarely played that way). It should be noted that stripped deck five-card stud is a game particularly well-suited to cheating by collusion, because it is easy for partners to signal a single hole card[?] and the relative value of knowing the location of a single card is higher than with a full deck.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Sanskrit language

... time led to the beginnings of linguistics. The oldest surviving Sanskrit grammar is Paanini's c. 500 BC Astaadhyaayii[?] ("8 Chapter Grammar"). A form of Sanskrit ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 23 ms