Unibet Poker Hands
Poker can be a with overwhelming when you are starting out. There are lots of variations of pokers, rules, and different kind of hands you can make. Therefore, we want to help you out a bit. We created a cheat sheet with an overview of all the poker hands you can make. The hand on top “Royal Flush. The way of doing it now where I need to take a screenshot whilst playing if I want to share a hand is all pretty clumsy. A possibility of sharing Unibet Poker hands would also advertise the Poker business side of Unibet I guess.
When comparing individual card ranks, the ace is the highest card. An ace can be used as a one to make straights or straight flushes, but in that case it counts as low card. For example, a straight or straight flush 2-3-4-5-6 is higher than A-2-3-4-5. T-J-Q-K-A is the highest possible straight or straight flush.
If a hand matches multiple definitions, the strongest hand is used. For example, 2-3-4-5-6 of Hearts is a straight flush, even though it matches the definitions of straight flush, flush, straight and high card.
Unibet Poker Hand History
Unibet Poker Hands To Play
- The rules of poker are simple and the way the hands are ranked is very straight forward. In total there are 10 different kinds of hands you can have. These hands are ranked from top to bottom from the Royal Flush to the single high card. In Texas Hold’em poker, the most popular form of poker, it doesn’t matter where the cards are coming from.
- The current high hand can be tracked by clicking on the promotion widget available in the poker lobby or on the cash game tables The promo runs every day from the 10th to the 30th November 2020 Every 20 minutes, the player who made the strongest hand in NLHE will get a 100 big blind NLHE ticket for the stake they played when they made the high.
Unibet Poker Hands Chart
Hand name | Sample hand | Tiebreaker |
---|---|---|
Straight Flush Five cards in sequence, all of the same suit. The highest possible straight flush (A-10) is called a royal flush. | Straight flushes are compared by the rank of their highest card (1). Note: In a 5, 4, 3, 2, A straight flush, the ace counts as a one, which makes this a 5-high straight flush, the smallest possible. | |
Four of a Kind (Quads) Four cards of the same rank and one other unmatched card | Quads are first compared by the rank of four matched cards (1). If those are tied, the unmatched card (known as the kicker) (2) is compared. | |
Full House Three cards of the same rank and a pair of other rank | Full houses are first compared by the rank of the triplet (1) and if they are tied, by the rank of the pair (2) | |
Flush Five cards of the same suit | Flushes are first compared by their highest rank (1), if that is tied – by second highest (2) and so on (3,4,5) | |
Straight Five cards in sequence | Straights are compared by the rank of their highest card (1). Note: In a 5, 4, 3, 2, A straight, the ace is a small card, which makes this a 5- high straight, the smallest possible. | |
Three of a Kind (Trips) Three cards of the same rank and two unmatched cards | Trips are first compared by the rank of the three matched cards (1), then by the higher one of the unmatched cards (known as the kickers) (2) and finally by the lower unmatched card (3) | |
Two Pair Two pairs of different ranks and an unmatched card | Two pairs are first compared by the rank of the higher pair (1), then by the lower pair (2) and finally by the rank of the kicker (3) | |
Pair Two matched cards and three unmatched cards | Pairs are first compared by the rank of the matched cards (1), and then by the kickers (2,3,4), starting from the highest one and comparing until a difference is found | |
High Card Five unmatched cards | High cards are compared by the rank of the highest card (1), and if that is the same, the next highest (2) and so on (3,4,5) |