Yes. That is two pairs against one pair, basically, and the pairs are higher in the first hand. ... If the king or the Ace were paired in the second hand, then that hand would win. But, basically, the value and suits of the cards don't matter in this particular hand, because two pairs always beats one pair. Actually the suits do not matter at all in Poker. It is the ranking of the cards that matter. For example, if there are two flushes (all same suit) it is the highest card that wins, not the suit.
In poker, a hand that can beat a full house is a four of a kind.
No, a royal flush is the highest hand in poker and cannot be beaten by any other hand.
In poker, a flush would typically beat a 3 of a kind.
In poker, a hand that can beat a pair is a two pair, three of a kind, straight, flush, full house, four of a kind, straight flush, or royal flush.
No, in poker, a straight does not beat three of a kind. Three of a kind is a higher ranking hand than a straight.
A bad beat is a losing of a poker hand after being the mathematical favourite to win at the start.
Poker is a five-card game. There is no such hand as three pairs.
In poker, a straight flush, four of a kind, a full house, a flush, a straight, and a two pair can beat a three of a kind.
straight flush
Yes, having three of a kind beats having two pairs in a poker hand.
Yes, in poker, a triple (three of a kind) beats two pairs in terms of hand ranking.
In poker, a flush beats trips. A flush is a hand where all five cards are of the same suit, while trips is a hand with three cards of the same rank.