It is not possible to have a straight and a pair as a winning card combination.
A combination of 5 cards is used to make the best combination possible, in this case the straight consists of 5 cards, which does not allow a pair to join the combination.
No, a straight is a straight, meaning you would split the pot
There is no such thing as "three pair" in Poker, you cannot have more than five cards to make a hand.
Straight is a five-card hand. In the case of two players with a straight, the player with the highest card wins. If the highest cards are the same, the player with the next highest card wins.
No, if you are playing wild cards, the wild cards can be any card you make it and if it makes a higher straight, the higher straight wins.
A straight flush always beats 4 of a kind.
Yes
Yes, 5 of a kind beats any hand in Poker using wild cards. It can only be beat by a higher 5 of a kind.
Not in 7 card poker.
It is not possible to have 3 pair in a game of Texas hold'em because you can only use 5 cards out of 7 and 3 pair uses 6. A straight of 5 cards is a valid hand. The full list of Poker Hand Rankings contains 10 hands.
No, it does not.
straight flush
Yes, no matter how small (or large) that straight is it still beats a 2 of a kind (pair) even if it is a low straight, such as Ace, 2, 3, 4, 5, Vs. a pair of Aces, the Straight wins. The full list of Poker Hand Rankings contains 10 hands.
No! Listed from the best hand to the worst : 1) Royal Flush 2) Straight Flush 3) Four of a Kind 4) Full House 5) Flush 6) Straight 7) Three of a Kind 8) Two Pairs 9) A Pair 10) High Card
Three aces in poker does not beat a small straight. A small straight beats three of a kind and two of a kind.
In poker? Cause i play Texas Hold'em and a Straight does NOT beat a fullhouse, starting from highest to lowest: Royal Flush, Straight flush, four of a kind, full house, flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, pair, high card.
No. Poker hand rankings are as follows (from best to worst):Straight flush4 of a kindFull houseFlushStraight3 of a kind2 pair1 pairHigh card
No. 5 6 7 suited is nothing. 5 cards in a sequence in same suit would be a straight flush which is very good. However, 2 kings is a pair.
A straight flush and a royal flush if you are talking about poker. Edit: The only thing that will beat this particular hand is a straight flush or a royal flush. However, if you are physically holding all of these cards, a straight flush is all that can beat this. The reason behind this is because a royal flush requires an ace with the same suit. Since you are holding all of the aces, there will not be a royal flush against you. ----- In some poker-playing groups, when playing with wild cards, you could potentially have five of a kind, which even beats a straight flush. And of course a royal flush is just one particular straight flush (with ace on top instead of a lower card on top); it would also be beaten by five of a kind.