Two hole cards and one up-card are dealt to all players in the hand. Up-cards are dealt face-up, and all players can see them while the player remains in the pot. The player with the lowest up-card must ‘bring it in’ with a forced bet – similar to how the blinds get the betting start in other poker games.
Another up-card is dealt. The player showing the best hand in their two up-cards, whether a pair or a high card, is first to act. Another betting round follows, using small bets.
Another up-card is dealt and the best visible hand is first to act. Another betting round follows, using big bets.
The last up-card is dealt to all remaining players and a betting round ensues.
The final card of the hand is dealt face-down to all remaining players, and once again the strongest visible hand is first to act in the subsequent betting round.
All cards are revealed and the winners collect their chips. Note the plural, ‘winners’: Hi/Lo or ‘split pot’ games divide the pot into two halves, awarding one to the best traditional poker hand and one to the lowest hand. But watch out – for the low hand to qualify, it cannot contain any pairs or cards higher than an eight (flushes and straights still qualify for low).