Nope, afraid not.
Yes, Jack, Queen, King, Ace, 2 is not considered a straight in poker. A straight in poker is a sequence of five consecutive cards in any suit.
No, a hand with 2, ace, king, queen, and jack is not considered a straight in poker because it does not have five consecutive cards in numerical order.
The highest straight in poker is a Royal Flush, which consists of the cards Ace, King, Queen, Jack, and 10 of the same suit.
yes. it also beats any "3 of a kind"
King Queen Jack Ace
No, ace two three four five is not a straight in poker. In poker, a straight is a hand with five consecutive cards of any suit. In this case, the ace is considered the highest card, so the sequence ace two three four five does not form a straight.
A straight flush is five cards in sequence of the same suit. A royal flush is a type of a straight flush where the cards are 10, Jack, Queen, King, Ace of the same suit. The royal flush is the highest ranking hand in poker. For more information about poker hands visit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_poker_hands
A card that has a face on it (King, Queen, Jack).
No, a "royal straight" is not a recognized hand in poker. The highest-ranking hand in poker is a royal flush, which consists of a 10, Jack, Queen, King, and Ace of the same suit.
No, in Crib aces are always low.
The Ace is always the highest card in a royal flush. Ace, king, queen, jack, and ten is the ranking of the cards in a royal flush.
Yes. A royal straight flush (10 - Jack - Queen -King - Ace) of spades beats a royal straight flush of any other suit.