What Is a Royal Flush in Poker? Everything You Need to Know!
Royal flush is the best possible hand in poker variants that used the high hand ranking system. It is comprised of the Ten, Jack, Queen, King and Ace all of the same suit. It is technically a type of straight flush, but it beats all other straight flushes. In games where it is possible for two players to make the royal flush at the same time, no specific suit takes precedent; a royal flush will always chop with another royal flush.
What is Rock in Poker?
Rock is the name given to an exceptionally tight poker payer who does not enter the pot with many hands. Rock is sometimes used interchangeably with the word nit, although there are varying opinions on the exact difference between a rock and a nit if any. A common opinion is that a rock exists somewhere between a TAG (tight aggressive) and a nit. The best counter-strategy against a rock is to steal a lot of pots on the first betting round but give up quickly when facing aggression.
What Is the River in Poker? Discover All You Need to Know about River Play!
The river is the name given the final betting round in the majority of poker variants. As an example, the betting rounds in Texas Hold’em are preflop, flop, turn and river. Since the river is the final betting round, any players remaining in the hand must reveal the strength of their hand after the river action is complete (known as showdown).
What is Reverse Implied Odds in Poker?
Reverse Implied Odds are an adjusted pot odds calculation that take into account the fact that we may lose money on the later streets when holding a mid-strength made hand or draw. This is due to the fact that our draw is not to the nuts and may still end up dominated even after hitting. Mid-strength made hands may appear to get the direct pot odds on the current street, but must account for the fact that they will possibly face more betting action on subsequent streets. When our hand is dominated in nature (and there are chips left for the later betting rounds), reverse implied odds will give a more accurate picture than pot odds. It’s the opposite concept to implied odds.