Read The Penguin Book of Card Games: Everything You Need to Know to Play Over 250 Games Online
Authors: David Parlett
change the relative ranking of hands. They do, however, introduce a
new hand consisting of four of a kind and a wild card counting as
the fifth. By agreement, ‘five of a kind’ either beats everything or is
beaten only by a royal flush. Of tied hands, one with fewer wild
cards beats one with more.
Short-pack Poker
Poker is often played in countries where short packs are the norm.
Like wild cards, short packs change the mathematics but not the
relative ranking of hands.
32-card Poker
The French 32-card pack runs AKQJT987, and Ace counts high or
low in a straight. In this game by far the commonest hand dealt is
one pair. A nothing hand is much rarer, turning up only about three
times in ten. This makes 32-card Poker much more interesting for
Hi-Lo or Lowbal . The most extreme variation occurs with the flush,
which is actual y harder to get than four of a kind. On the face of it,
then, the flush would seem a poor bet and a fourflush not worth
drawing to. On the other hand it is not possible to play with more
than five at a table (or six at Stud), and four is the best number. The
average winning hand is a high two pairs, as in normal Draw Poker,
and the reduced number of players virtual y halves the frequency of
fours and ful houses. The fourflush is therefore in fact a very
reasonable proposition. Players on the lookout for curiosities wil
find plenty of scope here. For instance, how about five-player high-
low stud with two spits common and wild?
Frequency of Poker hands in a 52-card pack with Deuces wild
The commonly reproduced table for this feature (possibly first
published in Culbertson’s Card Games Complete) is wrong, its most
misleading error lying in the rate for straight flushes, quoted as
4,556 instead of the correct 2,552. Only the figures for two pairs,
ful house, and five of a kind are correct in previous tables.
The hands are listed here in order of ascending frequency rather
than in correct ranking order. This makes fours commoner than
than in correct ranking order. This makes fours commoner than
flushes, threes than two pairs, and a nothing hand bet er than one
pair! The figures apply only to a five-card deal as at Five-Card
Draw and Stud, not to Seven-Card Stud. A blank indicates that the
given combination of cards would in practice be more profitably
rated as a hand of higher value. (5S etc. = fives, or five-the-same,
meaning five of a kind. NX is nix, meaning no combination.)
com total
= 1 in 0 wild 1 wild
2 wild
3 wild 4 wild
5S 672
3868 -
48
288
288
48 (a)
SF 2552
1108 32
544
1320
656
- (b)
FH 12672 789
3168
9504
-
-
-(c)
FL 14472 180
3136
7376
3960
-
-(d)
4S 31552 82
528
8448
19008
3568 -(e)
ST 62232 42
8160
34272
19800
-
- (f)
2P 95040 27
95040 -
-
-
-(g)
3S 355080 7
42240 253440 59400
-
- (h)
NX 799680 3
799680 -
-
-
-(i)
1P 1225008 2
760320 464688 -
-
- (j)
total 2598960 =
1712304 +778320 +103776 +4512 +48
Notes
(a), (b) If you prefer to rate a royal flush (RF) above five of a kind,
the figures become: RF=504, 5S=652, SF=2,068. In this case a
hand with four wild cards wil be counted as RF if the natural card
is Ten or higher, or 5S if Nine or lower.
(c) Two pairs and one wild card make a ful house, but with more
than one wild card the hand is at least four of a kind.
(d) A flush with three wild cards is at least four of a kind and may
be a straight flush. Any other flush is weak because on average it is
only half as common as four of a kind.
(e) Four of a kind gets dealt twice as often as a flush.
(f)Astraight with three wild cards is at least four ofa kind and may
be a straight flush.
(g) Two pairs canbemadeonlywith naturalcards andinmost contexts
is worthless.
(h) It fol ows that, if there are seven at a table, at least one player
wil probably be dealt three of a kind.
(i) A nix hand must consist of natural cards except in Hi-Lo or
Lowbal .
(j) Worthless alone, 1P stands good chances of conversion into 3S or
4S in a draw.
40-card Poker
Spanish and Italian packs lack Eights, Nines and Tens, so the ful
sequence runs AKQJ765432. The lowest straightis5432A and the
highest AKQJ7. When a 52-card pack is stripped to 40, it is usual to
discard everything lower than Five, making the lowest straight
A5678. The probabilitiesare
unaf ectedbywhichthreeranksareselectedfor removal. Again, the
commonest hand is one pair, which is dealt about five times in ten
as opposed to four nothing hands and one of anything higher.
Flushes are rarer than ful houses, but commoner than fours. A ful
table would be five or six players at Draw, six or seven at Stud.
48-card Poker
Pinochle enthusiasts have been known to play with a double 24-
card pack, running AKQJT9 in each suit. It produces weird results.
For instance, there are three distinct flush hands other than a
straight flush. A flush containing no duplicated cards is beaten by
any flush containing a pair, and a one-pair flush is beaten by any
two-pair flush. So, for example, a AKQJ9 fal s to KQJJ9,
whichin turn is beaten by JTT99. This seems logical enough until
you calculate the figures and discover that the most commonly dealt
flush is the middle-ranking one pair, and the rarest the no-pair.
These flushes, though ranking as a whole between a straight and a
ful house as in the normal game, are in fact rarer than ful houses.
The top hand is five of a kind, which is only marginal y rarer than
the straight flush. Ace may count high or low for the purpose of a
straight or straight flush, so the three possibilities are: A9TJQ,
9TJQK and TJQKA. The oddest feature of al is the rarity of the
nothing hand. It is not merely rarer than a pair, as in other short
pack games, but in fact is exactly as rare as the straight – there
being 97,920 of each type of hand in the total of 1,712,304 possible
hands in the 48-card. To put it another way, the chances of being
dealt a nothing hand are approximately 17-1 against. Thus, in the
topsy-turvy world of Hi-Lo Pinochle Poker, a nothing is as good as a
straight for the high hand, while the best low hand is a pair of
Nines accompanied by JQK of mixed suits.
20-card Poker
The earliest form of Poker, current in the Mississippi river-boats of
the 1820s, was played with 20 cards ranking AKQJT. The only
admissible hands were one pair, two pairs, and three and four of a
kind, though the ful house soon put in an appearance.
Frequency of Poker hands in short packs
32 cards
40 cards
number odds number odds
SF
20
10068 28
23499
4S 224
898 360
1827
FH 1344 149 2160 304
FL 204
986 980
670
ST
5100 381/2 7140 91
3S 12096 151/2 23040 271/2
2P 24192 71/2 51840 11 1/2
1P 107520 1
322560 1
NC 50676 3
249900 11/2
Total 201376
658008
Odds = odds to 1 against being dealt this hand from a properly
shuf led pack.
Freak-hand Poker
The smart gambler wil play a game he basical y hates if most of
the other
players have more enthusiasm than skil .
Carl Sifakis, Encyclopedia of Gambling (1990)
Freak hands are unorthodox Poker combinations, invented
original y to spice up games like basic Draw where most hands are
won on two pairs, leaving fours and straight flushes so rare as to
risk passing unrecognized when they deign to put in an appearance.
Apart from lowbal hands described above, freak hands have
dropped out of use and are not normal y welcomed in Dealer’s
Choice. This is because it is hard to work out where they should
rank in the hierarchy, hard to remember when you have worked
them out, and consequently apt to give rise to argument. What they
were designed to achieve has been more easily done by introducing