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No.
Yes 3 of a kind always beats two pair.
No, a full house beats two pair
Three kings and two nines is a full house, three aces is a three of a kind. A full house always beats a three of a kind.
No. Three of a kind beats two pair in poker hands.
In one deck of cards that is not reshuffled, there are 4(four) aces. That means only four(4) black jacks.
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.
In poker, the kicker is the highest card in a player's hand that is not part of a winning combination. If two players have the same winning hand, the kicker is used to determine the winner. For example, if two players both have a pair of Aces, the player with the highest kicker card wins. Kicker rules can impact the outcome of a hand by breaking ties and determining the winning player when hands are otherwise equal.
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.
In Texas Hold'em, the kicker is the highest card that doesn't contribute to a player's hand. If two players have the same hand, the kicker is used to determine the winner. For example, if two players both have a pair of Aces, the player with the higher kicker card wins. Kickers can impact the outcome of a hand by breaking ties between players with the same hand ranking.
In poker, a "kicker" is a card used to break ties between players with the same hand rank. It is the highest card that doesn't contribute to the main hand. The significance of the kicker is that it can determine the winner of a hand when players have the same hand rank. For example, if two players both have a pair of Aces, the player with the higher kicker card will win the hand.
In an ordinary deck of cards here are four of every denomination -- one in every suit (one in hearts, one in spades, etc.) There are four aces, four two's, four tens, four jacks and on and on.