11.07
Newcomer Course of Action for Double-Hand Poker
Double-hand Poker is a modern game with ancient ancestry. Based on the ancient Chinese tile game and the current American adaptation of poker, Pai Gow poker bands together the eastern with the wild west in a great game for starting gamblers.
Pai Gow is a poker game that pits the gambler vs. the dealer, unlike most other poker games that gamblers bet with other gamblers. By betting against the dealer, new players do not have to be concerned about any other, more skillful gamblers winning their cash.
Another Pai Gow benefit is the fairly slow game play, beginners will be able to take their time and plan without needing to make quick choices.
It’s also simpler to gamble on for a very long time with just a tiny bit of money since, to lose, each of your hands has to be under both of the casino’s hands.
Pai Gow is played with 53 cards; the regular 52-card standard deck and a single joker. The player is given 7 cards face up and the house is dealt seven cards faces hidden.
A five card hand and one two card hand have to be made from the 7 cards dealt, the five card hand must be higher than the 2 card hand. To win, a player is required to have both of his hand totals to be better than the dealer’s.