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The game of Caribbean Poker is a very famous card game enjoyed at land casinos all around the planet, as well as on ocean cruises. Now this exciting game may be played over the Internet as well. Plus for real cold hard cash!

This game, also called Caribbean Stud Poker, is not only a breeze to learn, it also lets you use a number of skills you may have learned from another popular poker game; five-Card Stud. Unlike conventional card poker games, Caribbean Poker players compete against the House and not other gamblers. Also, no bluffing takes place.

Caribbean Poker Guidelines

The rules are very similar to the House regulations at most brick and mortar casinos, with some minor differences: Six decks of cards are utilised as opposed to the standard 8 decks in Vegas-like casino establishments. The dealer does not peek, though in a land casino, the dealer will peek when a ten-card is showing. Additionally, the player is limited to only one split.

To start, you ante in & the dealer deals five cards to you and five to themself. The house turns among their cards up. Now you can place a subsequent wager known affectionately as the "Call" bet. Or you can 'Surrender.' Should you decide to surrender you will lose the hand & your ante.

Should you make the "Call" gamble afterwards the house exposes their cards. In order to continue to the showdown, the House is required to "qualify" by having at least an Ace-King or better. When the dealer does not qualify, you win the ante & your "Call" bet is returned.

If the dealer does qualify then a showdown ensues. If you win, the ante is paid at even money. If you win with anything better then a pair, the Casino pays you based on a multiple of whatever your "call" bet was, according to a bonus rating chart. In essence, the better your hand, the better the bonus.

Caribbean Poker's Betting Rounds

Two betting rounds occur in every hand of Caribbean Poker. The first round is your ante and the second happens when the Dealer reveals one of their cards. If you are comfortable with what you see and are convinced you are still have a chance of winning, you can then make a Call bet, which pays twice whatever your ante was. If you do not 'Call' and instead 'Surrender,' you forfeit your original ante.

Caribbean Poker Payoffs

Payoffs in Caribbean Poker are could not be more straightforward. For your convenience we've prepared the following payout schedule, though these figures will vary from online casino to online casino.

High Cards        1 to 1
One Pair        1 to 1
2 Pair            2 to 1
3 of-a-Kind        3 to 1
A Straight        4 to 1
A Flush        5 to 1
A Full House        7 to 1
Four of a Kind        20 to 1
A Straight Flush    50 to 1
A Royal Flush        100 to 1

This entry was posted on Monday, November 5th, 2007 at 6:16 pm and is filed under Poker. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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