Limit Hold Em Rules

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In this video I'll tell you everything you need to know to enjoy your journey into the fascinating world of poker together with your team.In case, you find t.

The main feature is that players can only bet a specific amount at a time, depending on the progress of the hand. For example, a $1/$2 limit hold'em table only allows players to bet $1 pre-flop, $1. Limit Hold’em is a game of big cards, aggression, isolation, and thin value betting. When compared with No Limit, hands that build big pairs such as AK, KQ, and AQ go up in value and implied odds type of hands such as small pairs and suited connectors go down. Lynn Gilmartin explains the basics and essentials to understanding Limit Texas Hold 'Em.- Latest Poker News at. By Tom 'TIME' Leonard. Many poker players now start out by playing no-limit hold’em and this lesson is intended for those looking to make the transition to fixed-limit hold’em. We’ll focus on differences between the two games. While the betting rules are the main difference between the two formats, there are many other strategic differences.

Playing before the flop is your first opportunity to voluntarily put money in the pot. Don’t just toss in the first single bet to be a part of the action. Make good decisions by following the advice given in this lesson and stick to our recommended starting hand requirements until you gain more experience. There is no shame in folding and waiting for a better hand to play. On the contrary, the shame is in falling prey to the donkey’s mantra of “any two will do!”

Before we mention starting hand requirements, let’s talk about the mindset that captures successful limit play. That mindset is the ability to be patient and selective about the hands you play. Patience is a critical element to winning hold’em play. Good players exercise the patience to wait for hands that they know have positive expectation and then play them aggressively. In a nutshell this strategy describes the selective, aggressive mantra that has been espoused by Krieger, Sklansky, Malmuth, Caro, and every other credible limit hold’em pundit of the last several decades.

Tight is Right

The tight-aggressive approach is the backbone of a successful limit player’s strategy. The reason this approach is so successful is simple—the vast majority of the poker playing public are long term losers who do not have the discipline or knowledge to beat the game. Let your opponents make the mistake of playing too many hands while you become more selective. It will pay dividends. If you only play hands that figure to be the best against opponents who play too many mediocre hands, it just makes sense that you will win money. This critical skill is the foundation upon which other skills need to be added to make you a formidable limit hold’em player.

The most common mistake made by limit hold’em players is that they play too many hands. Look, no one enters a casino or logs on to an online game with the intention of folding hand after hand. But when you look at the entire universe of possible two-card starting hand combinations you might be dealt, the vast majority of them are junk, which means the correct play is to fold most of them. If there’s one tip that will raise your game significantly, it’s this: be selective with the hands you choose to play, and then be aggressive with the hands you do play.

Starting Hand Selection

What hands should you play if you’re going to be patient and selective? Well, that depends in large measure upon your position relative to the dealer button. The best starting hands are playable from any position, but other hands have very different characteristics.

We have created a starting hand chart that can be used as a guide. This chart will load as a PDF document (link opens in a new window), which you can view on screen or print off for easy reference.

Understand that our attempt to categorize starting hands by their strength and positional considerations is a loose guide. There are many factors that may encourage you to tighten or loosen your play from these guidelines. As in all poker decisions the phrase, “It depends” comes to mind. That is to say our starting hand chart is a guide, not a set of intractable rules.

In fact, you may want to look at a starting hand chart this way:

  1. If you’re a beginner or a consistently money-losing player, treat this guide as the gospel.
  2. If you’re an experienced player, you can treat these recommendations as a guide.
  3. If you’re a skillful, winning player, please consider these recommendations a point of demarcation for your own creative, winning play.

But before you decide to deviate from these guidelines, have a reason for taking action that’s at variance from our recommendations.

We haven’t included every possible starting hand on our chart. Unplayable hands, also known as ‘junk’ don’t need any further explanation. I’m sure you will recognize them. In fact, the majority of the hands you’ll be dealt will fall into this category. Let your weak undisciplined opponents play 7-2 because it was suited—you throw them in the muck where they belong.

Type of Games

It’s important to be aware that different games play differently. The texture of the game—whether it’s tight and aggressive, tight and passive, loose and aggressive, loose and passive, or a mixture of these, will dictate what hands you should play. For example, if you’re playing in a loose and passive game, you can limp in from early position with small pocket pairs. If you’re playing in an aggressive game these hands are better off mucked from early position.

There is an old adage in poker relating to how tight or loose the game in which you’re in is being played. The adage advises to play tighter than the table. While this is obviously an over simplification it is generally true. While tight is certainly right, all you need do is play tighter poker than the table. The reason this will work is that through prudent hand selection coupled with your position you will be playing fewer (and generally better) hands than your opponents. However, expect loose games to tighten and tight games to become looser, and be ahead of that curve to ensure you’re in the most profitable zone at all times.

Calling vs. Raising

A lot of limit hold’em players will limp in pre-flop rather than raise. If you’re in a passive game and have a hand like J-Ts then you might want to limp because you’re looking to get as many people into the pot with you as possible in anticipation of flopping a big hand like a straight or flush—and making money from a large number of opponents. If you have a pair or high cards that can win without improving, such as A-K, you’re much better off raising and narrowing the field down to heads-up than you are by simply calling and inviting a number of players to enter the pot after you, one of whom might get lucky and steal the pot away from you.

If you call and are then raised, you’re going to call one more bet and see the flop. If it’s raised and re-raised, some players will do the same thing, regardless of the strength of their hand. Imagine entering the pot with the speculative hand of for a single bet from middle position. Now the player to your left raises, another player re-raises and yet another player makes it four bets, which is normally the cap in fixed limit. Weaker players will normally call as they have already invested a bet and the hand does have lots of potential. Stronger players would recognize the futility of throwing away three extra bets when it is apparent that they are way behind the competition. These distinctions will become clearer and clearer as your experience grows.

Cold Calling Raises

If the pot has been raised before it’s your turn, you must tighten up significantly and adjust for the position of the raise. Inexperienced limit hold’em players will frequently cold-call raises with mediocre and potentially dominated hands, such as A-J and K-J. These are costly errors. Be selective and avoid cold-calling raises with hands that have a slim chance to catch the cards they need to enable you to win the pot. Most good players, if they don’t have a very good hand, will simply throw their hand away and wait for a better opportunity. Remember that it takes a much better hand to call a raise than it does to make the initial raise yourself.

Always observe the pre-flop betting action in a limit hold’em game, because it provides valuable information about the strength of your opponent’s holdings. If there’s a bet and a raise and someone cold-calls, my first thought is “here’s a guy with A-Q who is terrified of a big pair and even more terrified of A-K”. He thinks A-Q is a pretty good hand and says to himself… “I’ll call and see what happens with it.” Of course it’s important that you assign a range of hands to your opponents, not just a specific hand. But most players will re-raise before the flop when they hold a premium hand and cold-calling a raise or cold-calling a re-raise is usually a sign of a hand that’s not in first place.

Conclusion

The question or whether to hold’em or fold’em is the first and most important decision you will make. If you’re new to limit hold’em then study our starting hand chart and follow the guidelines given in this lesson. Starting hand selection may differ slightly from pundit to pundit but these are a solid outline for a beginner to embrace. As your experience and knowledge of the game increases your starting requirements will vary based upon how tight or loose your table is, knowledge of the tendencies of players yet to act behind you, any betting that has occurred in front of you, and your current table image.

If you only play hands that figure to be the best against opponents who play too many mediocre hands, it just makes sense that you will win the money. Playing tight requires patience which many or even most recreational players just don’t exhibit. They are in the game to play, not sit to there and fold hand after hand and sit on the sidelines. This is the reason that most poker players are long term losers—they play too many hands. Sure they can get lucky playing junk on occasion and that is what keeps them coming back but their lack of patience and discipline is their financial undoing. If you truly seek success you must have the discipline to be patient.

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By Tom 'TIME' Leonard

Tom has been writing about poker since 1994 and has played across the USA for over 40 years, playing every game in almost every card room in Atlantic City, California and Las Vegas.

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We are talking about No Limit Texas Hold’em. We are talking about the most popular and available form of poker.

Once you know the rules and start dragging some pots, it’s off to the races.

What Is the Goal, How Do I Play?

No Limit Texas Hold’em is as easy to learn as it is exciting to play. Adding chips to your stack is the name of the game. To add chips to our stack we must win pots.

If we win chips, we win money.

The goal is to win pots. There are two ways to do that…

  • Value Bet – We can have the best hand and “value bet.” This means we bet and get called by a worse hand, thus winning the pot. We are simply “trying to get value” from a lesser hand.
  • Bluffing – We can bluff! Bluffing means betting in order to make a better hand fold. We bluff when we don’t have a good hand, but we do not believe our opponent does either. Bluffing can be effective but it is risky. The easiest way to win at poker is simply to make the best 5 card hand possible.

This chart below illustrates the hand rankings from top to bottom in Texas Hold’em.

Hold

What is the Difference Between a Tournament and a Cash Game?

In a tournament, we buy-in and receive a starting stack of chips. An example would be a $500 buy-in, where every player starts with 10,000 chips. We play until a winner is declared. Payout structures vary with most tournaments paying out between 10-15% of the total field.

If there are 100 entrants, around 10th-15th place would be a min-cash. Min cashes are generally double the buy in but again can vary depending on where we are playing. A typical tournament win pays the winner around 20% of the total prize pool. These numbers will certainly differ between tournament venues so be sure to know the payout structure before you sit down.

Cash Games

While the goals of cash games (winning pots and adding chips to our stack) remain the same, the structure is different. We don’t have to play until we either bust out or win. We can sit down at the table and leave the table as we wish. If we double our money in 30 minutes and want to leave we are free to do so.

In cash games, the blinds (a term we will define in a moment) remain constant. In a $2-$5 no-limit game, the small blind will always stay at $2 and the big blind will stay at $5.

In tournaments, the blinds increase every level in order to keep the tournament moving along. Levels in live tournaments generally last 40 minutes, but again will be different at unique events. Generally the longer the levels last the “better the structure is considered.” The WSOP main event levels last 2 hours.

When we play poker we are playing against the other players at the table. This is not blackjack or slots.

We are not competing against the house.

The house does not care if we win or lose. They make money by the players paying a rake.

Rake is essentially “the juice” the casino charges the player to play. In tournaments, this is the “forced fee” that is withdrawn from each entry of the prize pool. Most casinos charge around 12-15 percent as the rake.

That means if we play a tournament with a $500 buy-in, typically about $425 goes into the prize pool and the additional $75 will be used for equipment and paying the dealers.

In a cash game the rake is taken in one of two ways. Most cash games just take a percentage of every single pot. This is generally 5-10 percent of the pot and is usually capped at $5. In larger no limit cash games, generally $5-$10 and up: they do what is known as “timed pot”. Every 30 minutes the dealer collects $7 from each player. In timed pots, no money is ever taken out of a pot.

General Setup of The Table

Online No Limit Hold Em

Live at the casino, full-ring, or 9-handed is the most common way you will see No Limit Texas Hold’em being played.

When playing online, 6-max (6-handed), as well as heads-up vs. a single opponent, are generally available as well. Either way, the rules and goals remain the same.

Community Cards
The community cards are the five cards that each player can combine with their two cards to make the best five-card hand possible. The first three cards are known as the “flop.” The 4th card is the “turn.” The 5th card is the “river.” These cards and how the betting works will be explained in great detail in a section below.
Dealer Button
The button is the player to the right of the blinds and will be the final player to act each betting round. This is widely considered as the “best position” to play our hand from.
Small Blind
The small blind is the player in between the button and big blind. This player must post a fixed amount of chips into the pot before the cards are dealt. If we are playing a tournament with the blinds at 200-400, the small blind is responsible for placing out 200 chips before the hand starts. In a $2-$5 cash game, the small blind is the player posting $2. The small blind will act first on all betting rounds.
Big Blind
The big blind is the player to the left of the small blind. If we are playing a tournament with the blinds at 200-400, the big blind is responsible for placing out 400 chips before the hand starts. In a $2-$5 cash game, the small blind is the player posting $5. If no player raises before the flop, the big blind may check his or her option and see the flop without committing any additional chips.

To keep everything fair, all three of these positions rotate in a clockwise fashion following each hand. Everyone will experience the button and the blinds equally.

How Does a Hand Play Out?

Let’s make this even more fun and easy to follow. We will describe the action of a hand just like it would play out at the table. Poker is played in “streets” or betting rounds. It all starts before the flop….

Everyone is dealt two cards. The player to the left of the big blind is up first. That player can either fold their two cards, call the big blind, or open for a raise of any amount. (We will later cover Limit Hold’em where the betting amount is a fixed amount).

If we fold, we simply are out of the hand. We must wait until the next hand starts and we are dealt two new cards.

Calling means matching the amount of whatever the current bet is. If nobody has raised, calling would be the amount of the big blind. If someone has opened for a raise, we can no longer call the big blind. We must match the amount of the raise. The other option is to re-raise…

Re-raising, commonly referred to as “3-betting” can become frequent in aggressive games. No limit means exactly that. There is no limit to the amount of chips or number of times the pot can be re-raised.

Here is an example of a 3-bet in a cash game. We are playing $2-$5 no limit and there is a raise to $20. Let’s say we don’t want to fold and we don’t want to call the $20. To apply pressure we can “3-bet” or re-raise the pot to whatever we want. Common 3bets in cash games are 3-4 times the size of the original raise. In this case, a 3-bet to $60 or $80 can come in handy. If the original raise comes over the top of our re-raise and makes it $200; that is considered a “4-bet.” Another raise after that? A 5-bet. This can continue to go on until the players are all in.

Once each player has had a chance to act we go to the flop…

Let’s see if we connect with the board! The first card is “burned” or simply placed face down. This is a way to make sure the dealer is not cheating or colluding with a player at the table. In the past dealers unfortunately would cheat for certain players so the idea of a “burn card” helps prevent such things.

The next 3 cards off the top of the deck are placed face up on the table. These first 3 community cards are what is known as the flop. Everyone in the hand can use these cards (to make the best five-card hand possible).

This time, whoever is to the left of the button is the first player to act. He or she can either check or bet. Checking simply means passing the action to the next person.

Checking means we don’t bet and we don’t fold.

We just pass the action on to the next player. Betting means putting more chips into the pot. Once a player bets, the next player can fold, call the bet, or raise the bet. Once a bet is made, checking is no longer an option until the next card comes….

The fourth card, or the turn card is now placed face up next to the flop. The order and rules for this betting round are identical as the flop. Whoever is left after this betting round gets to see the final card…

River

The fifth and final card is now placed face up next to the turn, completing the 5 community cards. The betting round takes place with the same rules as in earlier betting rounds. The difference here is what happens next.

If the river is checked, the hands are turned face up and the pot is awarded to the player with best 5 card hand. If a bet is made on the river and nobody calls, the pot is now over and awarded to whoever placed the bet.

If the bet is called, the winning hand takes the pot. Rules on this final exchange vary between tournaments and cash games and can even be different depending on which casino you are at. Those details will be covered in the section below.

There are certain things that we need to be aware of before we sit down and play in a poker game. We always want to be aware of where we are playing and any “house rules” that may be different from our normal poker game. This is to protect us from losing out on a pot because of a silly rule we didn’t know about. Here are a few key points to always be aware of before sitting down to play…

Cash Games vs. Tournaments

Whether we are playing in a cash game or in a tournament, the rules of No Limit Texas Hold’em remain the same. There are however a few differences in how the action of a hand may take place. Let’s take a look at what we are talking about…

Player A bets out on the river and we call the bet. Player A says, “Nice call, you caught me bluffing” and throws the hand into the muck.

Do we need to show our hand in order to win the pot?

In a tournament the answer is yes, we must show our winning hand. This is done solely to protect the players and avoid collusion. In a cash game, however, we do not need to show our hand if the bettor mucks. If we call the river bet and the bettor does not turn his hand face up, we are awarded the pot.

Limit Hold'em Rules

We are in a cash game and we bet $35 on the river. My opponent tosses in a $100 chip without saying anything.

Is this a call or a raise?

This is just a call. The opponent must announce “raise” in order for the single $100 chip to be a raise. Otherwise, this is just a call.

We are playing a cash game and our opponent has $600. He pushes out a single $25 chip on the river and says “All-in”. As he is putting his bet out we quickly toss out $25, signifying a call. He turns his hand over and we rip our earphones off and say,

“I didn’t hear him say all-in, I thought the bet was $25, I only wanted to call a $25 bet!”

Do we have to call $25 or his all-in for $600?

We must call the full amount of $600 as it is our responsibility to know the correct action. Cash games or a tournament, it makes no difference. If a bet is made and the opponent tosses in a chip, he or she is responsible for the full amount.

We will not see straddles in tournaments. In cash games, however, straddles are allowed in many casinos, but not all. A straddle is essentially a third blind. Straddles are NOT however blind raises.

No Limit Hold Em Rules

If we are playing $2-$5 No limit, a straddle would be a $10 blind that must be put down before the cards are dealt from the player to the left of the big blind (next to act). This player is known as the under the gun, or UTG player. The difference between a blind raise and a straddle is the player who straddles will still have the option to act again before the flop.

Mississippi Straddles

Mississippi straddles have one major difference than a regular straddle and that is: which player straddles. Instead of the player to the left of the big blind (UTG player) placing the $10 straddle, it comes from the player on the button.

Some casinos begin the action with the player in the small blind, others still begin action with the player to the left of the big blind. Many casinos do not allow this form of straddling so be sure to check with the Poker room manager beforehand.

It is important to note that while generally a straddle is twice the amount as the big blind, in some cases it can be more. We have seen $2-$5 no limit games with the ability to straddle anywhere from $10-$50. These games are less common but certainly exist.

Limit Hold’em is just like No Limit Texas Hold’em save for one major difference: the betting structure. In no limit, we know any player can wager their entire stack at any point in the hand. In limit hold’em the betting amounts are predetermined. Let’s say we are playing $4-$8 limit hold’em…

This means the “small bet is $4 and the big bet is $8.” The blinds would be $2-$4 because the big blind and small bet are always equal. Before the flop and on the flop we can only bet in $4 increments. On the turn and river we bet in increments of $8.

The amount of raises and re-raises in limit hold’em WILL depend on which casino you are at. Generally 4 or 5 raises is the most allowed. This means after 4 or 5 raises the action is considered “capped”, and the only option now is to call or fold.

Free No Limit Hold Em

Conclusion

The more we play No Limit Texas Hold’em, the more fun it becomes. There is a reason it is the most popular poker game being played.

Anyone can learn, anyone can play, and anyone can win! Know the rules and the rest is up to you!