So, does a Hold’em player need to change their approach when it comes to playing Royal Poker? You bet they do!
Playing with just five ranks of cards means you’ll need to make some adjustments when it comes to evaluating the strength of your hands. A pair of aces may be a great starting hand in Texas Hold’em, but in Royal Poker it’s not quite as exciting.
Bigger hands are very common, and usually necessary to take down the pot.
With fewer cards in play, you should consider these facts when developing your Royal Poker strategy:
- Any pair on the board is highly likely to have given someone trips or a full house
- The only possible unpaired board is a straight
- The only possible flush is a royal flush
This means, for example, that if you make a straight on the turn, the river will either a) be the fifth card to the straight, making the nuts on the board for a split pot, or b) pair a board card, most likely giving someone a full house.
The result is a
truly dramatic game filled with big hands and exciting showdowns, where full houses, quads and royal flushes are all much more common (and so getting big hands like these won’t count towards your
Replay Poker Achievements).
Royal Hold’em Poker is a game we’d recommend to any poker player looking for
a new, fun game to try. And at Replay Poker you can
play it for free against real opponents, worldwide, without risking a cent!