Five-card draw, the oldest form of poker
Posted on July 21, 2008
Filed Under Poker |
Five-card draw is the oldest form of poker and often the first variant learned by most players, the game they grew up playing around the kitchen table. Five-card draw is the game you must have seen in numerous poker scenes in old westerns. It is common in home games although it is rare in casino and tournament play. In this game, your goal is to make the best five-card hand after one draw. Like hold’em, it’s a game that’s easy to learn and play, but takes a lifetime to master.
Gameplay / Basic rules
The game is played by 2-5 players. A standard 52-card deck is used. Five Card Draw can be played as a Limit, Pot limit or No limit game. In five card draw, you do not get to see any of your opponents’ cards. The only information you have about their hands is how they bet and how many cards they draw. Here is the sequence of action for Five-card draw.
Home games typically use an ante, the initial bet made by everyone. Online five card draw is played with blinds. Before the cards are dealt, the first two players to the left of the dealer post a small and a big blind respectively to create a starting pot.
Each player is dealt five cards, one at a time, all face down. The remaining deck is placed aside, often protected by placing a chip or other marker on it. Players pick up the cards and hold them in their hands, being careful to keep them concealed from the other players, then a round of betting occurs.
The first betting round begins with the player to the dealer’s left, and the second round begins with the player who opened the first round. In casino play the first betting round begins with the player to the left of the big blind, and subsequent rounds begin with the player to the dealer’s left.
The first player after the big blind has the option to fold, call, or raise. Action continues clockwise around the poker table until betting is complete for the round.
If more than one player remains after the first round, the “draw” phase begins. Each player specifies how many of his cards he wishes to replace, and discards them. The deck is retrieved, and each player is dealt in turn from the deck the same number of cards he discarded so that each player again has five cards. The rules for online 5 card draw are a little different that most home games. You can draw 5 new cards if you like.
A second “after the draw” betting round occurs beginning with the player to the dealer’s left or else beginning with the player who opened the first round (the latter is common in home games, when antes are used instead of blinds). This is followed by a showdown if more than one player remains, in which the player with the best hand wins the pot. After the pot is awarded to the best hand, a new game of Five Draw is ready to be played.
If two or more hands have the same value, the pot is equally split among them.
House rules
A common “house rule” in some places is that a player may not replace more than three cards, unless he draws four cards while keeping an ace (or wild card). This rule is only needed for low-stakes social games where many players will stay for the draw, and will help avoid depletion of the deck. In more serious games such as those played in casinos it is unnecessary and generally not used. A rule that is used by many casinos is that a player is not allowed to draw five consecutive cards from the deck. In this case, if a player wishes to replace all five of his cards, he is given four of them in turn, the other players are given their draws, and then the dealer returns to that player to give him his fifth replacement; if no other player draws it is necessary to deal a burn card first.
Another common house rule is that the bottom card of the deck is never given as a replacement, to avoid the possibility of someone who might have seen it during the deal using that information. If the deck is depleted during the draw before all players have received their replacements, the last players can receive cards chosen randomly from among those discarded by previous players. For example, if the last player to draw wants three replacements but there are only two cards remaining in the deck, the dealer gives the player the one top card he can give, then shuffles together the bottom card of the deck, the burn card, and the earlier players’ discards (but not the player’s own discards), and finally deals two more replacements to the last player.
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