3 of a kind Aces can not beat a full house. In this particular case it is most likely that there was a pair and an ace already on the board, making the 3 aces and the pair on the board a higher full house then the other full house.
A full house always beats a flush, unless it is a straight flush or a royal flush.
Yes it does. Hand Rankings: Royal Flush Straight Flush 4 of a kind Full House Flush Straight 3 of a kind Two Pair One Pair High Card
No. There are only 3 hands that beat a Full House - Four of a kind, Straight Flush and Royal Flush. A full list of the Poker Hand Rankings, with hand examples, can be found in the related links.
No, a full house beats two pair in poker. A full house is a hand that consists of three cards of one rank and two cards of another rank, while two pair is a hand that consists of two cards of one rank, two cards of another rank, and one card of a third rank. The ranking of hands in poker goes from highest to lowest: royal flush, straight flush, four of a kind, full house, flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, one pair, and high card. So, in summary, a full house is ranked higher than two pair in poker.
NO the order is (from lowest to highest) 1 pair 2 two pair 3 three of a kind 4 straight 5 flush 6 full house 7 four of a kind 8 straight flush 9 royal flush
Four of a kind, full house, a flush, or a royal flush
As in poker, a Full House is a roll where you have both a 3 of a kind, and a pair. Full houses score 25 points.link for help with Yahtzee:
If you score a full house in the Full House slot it's worth 25 points. If you score it in 3 of a Kind it's worth whatever all the dice add up to.
No, a flush beats 2 pair. There are 10 ranking hands, in descending order: Royal flush, Straight flush, 4 of a kind, Full House, Flush, Straight, 3 of a kind, 2 pair, 1 pair and a no pair hand.
Three pairs isn't possible. you have to play 5 cards. so you would play the highest two pairs. So yes, a full house would win.
A full house does beat 5 of the same suit - called a flush - unless the 5 are in order, ie 5,6,7,8,9 in which it is a straight flush. If the 5 are the 10, J, Q, K, A then it is a royal flush and the highest possible hand that can be made without wild cards.