A straight can beat a high card, one pair, two pair, and three of a kind.
In poker, a pair of aces is the highest pair, so a pair of aces and a pair of sixes would beat a pair of jacks and a pair of queens. The ranking of the pairs determines the winner, with aces being the highest and jacks the lowest. Thus, the pair of aces and sixes wins.
It depends on the type of poker game being played.In a game where aces are low (they are equivalent to the number 1). In that case yes, a pair of fives beats a pair of aces.In a game where aces are high, then no, the pair of aces definitely wins. A pair of aces is the highest single pair you can get in the game of poker, before getting two pair or higher.Both of these types of games are played in poker.
The two pair, although lower, beat the pair of Aces.
In High Card Poker, the hand with the highest ranking combination wins. A hand of three Aces, a 2, and a 4 (three of a kind) beats a hand with a pair of Kings, a pair of Queens, and a 5 (two pair). Therefore, the three Aces hand wins.
In poker, a hand is ranked primarily by its highest combination. A pair of aces and a pair of sixes (two pair) beats a pair of kings and a pair of tens (also two pair) because aces are the highest-ranking cards. Therefore, the hand with aces and sixes wins.
yes, almost any combo of cards beat 2 pair (for other infromation) the shorter way to put it is that the only things that 2pair beats are: A- a lower 2 pair B- a single pair C- high card
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.
Two pair works like this, the higher pair determines who is the winner. Suppose I have two pair Aces and fives, that means I beat all two pair that have kings as the higher pair, and queens etc. So Aces and fives beats Kings and queens. Now, if there is tie then the second pair comes in, so Aces and fives loses to Aces and sevens.
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.
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.
Two pairs of aces (called 4 of a kind) does beat a flush.