Hands are always formed with 5 cards, so even with four a kind a fifth card is required to form the hand. With the four of a kind no the board in hold'em every player will take their highest card to form the hand. This highest card is their kicker, and the player with the highest kickers wins. If two players have that same final card the pot will be split.
For example, community cards: 7s 7c 7d 7h 9c
Tom: 8h Ks
Jack: Ah 2h
Jack has four sevens ace-high, Tom has four sevens king high. Jack's ace is higher than the King so he wins.
A straight flush
In Texas Holdem, when two players have the same flush, the pot is split evenly between them as a tiebreaker.
The hands in Texas Holdem are very similar to the hands of regular poker. In both the best hand you can get is a Straight Flush where the cards are in sequence and of the same suit.
this is the order from worst to best: High card, Pair, Two pair, Three of a kind, Strait, Flush, Full house, 4 of a kind, Strait flush, 5 of a kind.
Well poker hands are [from the worst to the best]: 1- high card [no-pair] 2- one pair 3- two pair 4- three of a kind [trips, set] 5- straight 6- flush 7- full house [full boat] 8- four of a kind [quads] 9- straight flush 10- royal straight flush. So.. yes, it does. Royal flushes are the strongest hands in regular texas holdem.
In poker, a straight is beaten by a flush, a full house, four of a kind, a straight flush, and a royal flush.
In poker, a flush beats a straight but is beaten by a full house, four of a kind, straight flush, and a royal flush.
With 5 cards: Straight Flush: approx 72,192 to 1 Royal Flush: 649,740 to 1 With 6 cards: Straight Flush: approx 12293 to 1 Royal Flush: 108289 to 1 With 7 cards: Straight Flush: approx 3590 to 1 Royal Flush: 30939 to 1
In poker, a three-of-a-kind is beaten by four-of-a-kind, a full house, a straight, a flush or a straight flush.
No. Four of a Kind is only beaten by a Straight Flush or a Royal Flush. Here is the order: * Royal Flush * Straight flush * Four of a kind * Full house * Flush * Straight * Three of a kind * Two pair * One pair * High card
If a straight of red hearts = Straight Flush, then the only hand that would beat it is a straight flush that is higher, such as a Royal Flush. Otherwise, that hand is pretty much unbeatable.
Unless someone can make a flush or a straight flush, (for example, if the QKA on the board are all the same suit and player 1 has J 10 in that suit), the pot is split equally among the 4 players. In general, each player makes the best 5 card hand he can with the 7 cards at his disposal (5 on the board and 2 in his hand). If two or more players make the same hand (or hands that rank the same) then the pot is split. In this case, assuming no available flushes, each player makes an Ace-high straight. Since these are all the same rank - it doesn't matter than one player's ace comes from his hand instead of the board; the hands are still the same - the pot is split.