7 Card Stud Game
#ABCDEFGH I J K LMN O P Q RST U VW X Y Z
Variant | Game type |
---|---|
5 Card Roll Your Own | |
5 Card Stud | stud |
5 Card Stud High-Low | |
5 Card Stud High-Low With a Buy | |
7 and What Makes It | |
7 Card Regrets | stud |
7 Card Stud | |
7 Card Stud High-Low | |
7 Card Stud with Wild Cards | |
10 Card Regrets | |
Abyssinia | |
Aces, Straights and Flushes | |
Anaconda [= Pass The Trash] | |
Auction | |
Babies' Daddy | |
Baseball | |
Baseball, National League Rules | |
Bitch, The | |
Black Mariah | stud |
Buy Your Card / Substitution | |
California Stud [= Sökö] | stud |
Chameleon | |
Chicago | |
Cowpie Poker | |
Dakota | |
Dead Deuce | |
Delaware Stud | |
Deuces & Jacks & the Man with the Axe | |
Dirty Schultz | |
Do Ya | |
Eddie's Choice | |
English Stud | |
Faces of Death | stud |
Five Card Roll Your Own | |
Five Card Stud | stud |
Five Card Stud High-Low | |
Five Card Stud High-Low With a Buy | |
Follow The Queen | |
Football | |
Football (3) | |
Four Up, Four Down | |
Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The | |
Grocery Store Dots | |
Have a Heart | |
Hearts Poker | |
Henway | |
High Chicago [= Chicago] | |
High-Low Chicago | |
Howdy Doody | |
Jack the Shifter | stud |
Late Show [= Low Hole] | |
London Lowball (7-card Stud) | |
Low Chicago | |
Low Hold | |
Low Hole | |
Lowball (5 Card Stud) | |
Luck of the Irish | |
Mexican Stud | stud |
Mexican Sweat | stud |
Midnight Baseball [= Night Baseball] | |
Mississippi Mud | |
More or Less | |
Motown | |
New York New York | |
Night Baseball | |
No Peek | stud |
No Peek Baseball [= Night Baseball] | |
No Peek High-Low | |
Palace Poker | |
Pass The Trash | |
Pick a Partner | |
Price is Right, The | |
Privacy Poker | |
Progressive Badugi with a Buy | |
Psycho | |
Push | |
Razz | |
Respect the Four [= Four Up, Four Down] | |
Riding Ramone | |
Roll Your Own | |
San Francisco | |
Second Hand High | stud |
Selection / Rejection | |
Sequence | |
Seven and What Makes It | |
Seven Card Stud | |
Seven Card Stud High-Low | |
Seven Card Stud with Wild Cards | |
Seven-card Regrets | stud |
Sex in the Middle East | |
Smack My Bitch Up | |
Sökö | stud |
Spokane Open Wild | |
Stud-Jack | |
Substitution | |
Telesina | stud |
Ten-Card Regrets | |
Train Wreck | |
Two Thirds | stud |
Two-Spit | |
Vancouver Stud | |
Waiting for Godot | |
Wall Street | |
Want it? Want it? Got it! [= Selection / Rejection] | |
Weeping Willow | |
Who Da Baby Daddy Is | |
Widow Jack | |
Woolworth | |
Woolworth's Jackpot Penalty MJTF |
Fun 7 Card Stud Games
A seven card stud is a game of high cards. A few of the basic winning as well as the technical strategies are discussed here. These techniques are a strong recommendation of 7 card stud poker experts. These are different competing levels which are involved in this 7 card stud. Long before Hold 'em became 'the game', Seven Card Stud (also called Stud Hi), was what you played when poker night came around. One part skill, one part memory, one part strategy, no parts boring. Seven Card Stud is the original (and for some, arguably the best) game of poker. If you’ve never played a poker game, high chances are you’ve seen Seven Card Stud in action on a TV show or movie; blokes. There are no community cards in stud games. Instead, each player in 7 Card Stud receives seven unique cards. The first dealing street includes two down cards and one up card to each of the players. Four more betting rounds commence after that, with each player dealt another card.
In hold'em, players receive two down cards as their personal hand (holecards), after which there is a round of betting. Three board cards are turned simultaneously (called the flop) and another round of betting occurs. The next two board cards are turned one at a time, with a round of betting after each card. The board cards are community cards, and a player can use any five-card combination from among the board and personal cards. A player can even use all of the board cards and no personal cards to form a hand ('play the board'). A dealer button is used. The usual structure is to use two blinds, but it is possible to play the game with one blind, multiple blinds, an ante, or combination of blinds plus an ante.Seven-card stud is most often played as a limit game. Sticking with the same example of our $10/$20 seven-card stud game, the limits of betting on third and fourth street would be the smaller.
Rounds of Betting
- Opening deal- Each player is dealt two cards face down, which are known as hole cards or pocket cards.
- First round of betting- Starting with the player to the left of the big blind, each player can call the big blind, raise, or fold. The big blind has the option to raise an otherwise unraised pot.
- The flop- The dealer burns a card, and then deals three community cards face up. The first three cards are referred to as the flop, while all of the community cards are collectively called the board.
- Second round of betting- Starting with the player to the left of the dealer button, each player can check or bet. Once a bet has been made, each player can raise, call, or fold.
- The turn- The dealer burns another card, and then adds a fourth card face-up to the community cards. This fourth card is known as the turn card, or fourth street.
- Third round of betting- It follows the same format as the second round, but the size of the bets have usually doubled in limit games.
- The river- The dealer burns another card, and then adds a fifth and final card to the community cards. This fifth card is known as the river card, or fifth street.
- Final round of betting- It follows the same format as the second and third rounds.
- The showdown- Using the best five-card combination of their hole cards and the community cards, the remaining players show their hands, with the bettor or last raiser showing first. The highest five-card hand wins the pot. (In case of a tie, the pot is evenly split among the winning hands.)
Play 7 Card Stud Online
Poker Games 7 Card Stud
- These rules deal only with irregularities. SeeButton and Blinduse for rules on that subject.
- If the first or second hole card dealt is exposed, a misdeal results. The dealer retrieves the card, reshuffles, and recuts the cards. If any other holecard is exposed due to a dealer error, the deal continues. The exposed card can not be kept. After completing the hand, the dealer replaces the card with the top card on the deck, and the exposed card is then used for the burncard. If more than one hole card is exposed, this is a misdeal and there must be a redeal.
- If the flop contains too many cards, it must be redealt. (This applies even if it is possible to know which card is the extra one.)
- If the flop needs to be redealt because the cards were prematurely flopped before the betting was complete, or the flop contained too many cards, the board cards are mixed with the remainder of the deck. The burn card remains on the table. After shuffling, the dealer cuts the deck and deals a new flop without burning a card.
See Explanations,discussion #2, for more information on this rule. - If the dealer turns the fourth card on the board before the betting round is complete, the card is taken out of play for that round, even if subsequent players elect to fold. The betting is then completed. The dealer burns and turns what would have been the fifth card in the fourth card's place. After this round of betting, the dealer reshuffles the deck, including the card that was taken out of play, but not including the burn cards or discards. The dealer then cuts the deck and turns the final card without burning a card. If the fifth card is turned up prematurely, the deck is reshuffled and dealt in the same manner.
See Explanations,discussion #2, for more information on this rule. - If the dealer mistakenly deals the first player an extra card (after all players have received their starting hands), the card is returned to the deck and used for the burn card. If the dealer mistakenly deals more than one extra card, it is a misdeal.
- If you are playing the board, you must so declare before you throw your cards away; otherwise you relinquish all claim to the pot.