two pair, one pair, and high card.
"Two of a kind" is one pair. Two pair beats one pair in any kind of poker.
In poker ANY 2 pair beats a King high hand.
No, a full house beats two pair
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
If you refer to poker, you cannot get three-pair; that would require 6 cards where you only have use of 5. Do not confuse three-pair with a full house. In any other game, it depends on whatever the rulebase is.
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.
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.
Pocket rockets - A pair or two pair.
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.
The pair of queens beat the pair of tens, the nine and the ace are irrelevant. Queens are higher ranked than tens.
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.