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» About
Omaha Hi is a version of Texas Hold'Em where
players are dealt four hole cards instead of two.
But there's a catch: two and only two of the hole
cards can be used in making the final hand. Omaha
Hi is also known as Omaha Hold'Em or simply Omaha.
The four hole cards make Omaha a nine-card game
and having more cards to choose from means players
will typically finish with stronger hands. Poker
players being the people that they often are,
the possibility of higher hands typically means
that players stay in longer and the pots will
grow accordingly.
In practice, Hold'Em players will find that the
focus in Omaha Hi tends more towards playing the
cards than playing the other players.
» Basic rules
For the basics of Omaha, see our Texas
Hold'Em rules. The only variations are:
- the player is dealt four hole cards.
- the player makes their final hand from two
of the four hole cards and three of the five
community cards.
» Strategy
Since the name of the game in Omaha is to assemble
the killer hand, it essentially becomes a drawing
game. You take the possibilities you're dealt
with the hole cards, determine what you can make
out of it, watch the community cards as they fall
with a careful eye on what they're doing to your
chances and bail if it becomes clear that things
are going sour. You can burn off a lot of chips
hanging around to see if things improve.
The strategy guidelines for Omaha run into the
dozens because of the number of cards in play
and the two-from-four rule. To make a long story
short, it's generally advised that you stay
in if your hole cards integrate well -that
is, they form the beginnings of several good hands
- and muck them if they don't.
Rookie Omaha players are often suckered in by
a solid pack of hole cards or a strong string
of community cards. Remember, Four to a Flush
in the hole is useless because you only get to
keep two of them. Ditto with the community cards.
There is no point to betting on cards you can't
keep so remember: two hole cards, three community
cards, no exceptions, period.
Watch out for busted hands in the initial
deal: two cards might start a Straight and
the others a Flush, but there's no crossover in
that you can't recombine the cards to form yet
another hand, like a Straight Flush for instance.
To avoid chasing rainbows, muck pairs of orphans
unless they're top-nut beginnings.
Beware of "second nut" hands,
those where even if you got what you needed it
still wouldn't be a boss hand. Many an Omaha player
has gone home with empty pockets and the haunting
feeling that they should've learned something
from the experience. Second nut is second place
-if you're lucky-and you should play accordingly.
Finally, don't stay in hoping things will
get better. If the flop goes against you,
muck out because if those three cards haven't
helped you the chances are that nothing else will.
The smart money says keep your chips for the next
hand.
»
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Baccarat
- Blackjack - Carribean
Stud Poker - Chuck-a-Luck - Craps
- Kéno - Poker
Draw - Poker Texas Hold'em -
Poker 7-card Stud -
Poker Omaha Hi - Poker Pai Gow - Roulette
Monte Carlo - Sic Bo - Slot
machines
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