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| Strategies for playing Video Poker |
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Playing Strategy
House Edge
Advice and Comments
Appendices
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Jacks or Better
The following
strategy is for full pay jacks or better video poker. "Full pay"
designates the following paytable, per coin based on five coins bet,
which returns 99.54% of money bet assuming optimal strategy.
| Full Pay Jacks or Better |
| Hand |
Payoff |
| Royal flush |
800 |
| Straight flush |
50 |
| Four of a kind |
25 |
| Full house |
9 |
| Flush |
6 |
| Straight |
4 |
| Three of a kind |
3 |
| Two pair |
2 |
| Jacks or better |
1 |
To use this strategy look up all reasonable ways to play
a hand and choose the play that is highest on the list. If your hand
isn't on the list then it should never be played. The numbers on the
right represent the average return. These numbers can vary depending
on the discards.
Let's try an example. Suppose you have both four to a flush and a
low pair. Should you sacrifice the low pair to complete the flush or
sacrifice the possible flush and keep the low pair. From the list
below 4 to a flush has a higher ranking and thus is the better play.
To test yourself on other hands try my video
poker quiz.
I admit this is a long and rather difficult strategy but I
believe it correctly advises every possible hand. If used correctly
it should yield perfect play.
- Pat royal flush (800.0000)
- Pat straight flush (50.0000)
- Pat four of a kind (25.0000)
- 4 to a royal flush (18.3617)
- Pat full house (9.0000)
- Pat flush (6.0000)
- 3 of a kind (4.3025)
- Pat straight (4.0000)
- 4 to a straight flush (3.5319)
- Two pair (2.59574)
- High pair (1.5365)
- 3 to a royal flush (1.2868) A
- 4 to a flush (1.2766)
- 4 to an outside straight with 3 high cards (0.8723)
- Low pair (0.8237)
- 4 to an outside straight with 0-2 high cards (0.6809)
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 5, 2 high cards (0.6429)
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 4, 1+ high card (0.6392)
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 3, 0+ high cards (0.6207)
- Suited jack and queen (0.6004) B
- 4 to an inside straight, 4 high cards (0.5957)
- 2 suited high cards, king highest (0.5821)
- 2 suited high cards, ace highest (0.5678)
- 4 to an inside straight, 3 high cards (0.5319)
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 5, 1 high card (0.5227)
C
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 4, 0 high cards (0.5097)
- Unsuited JQK (0.5005)
- Unsuited JQ (0.4980)
- Suited TJ (0.4968) D
- 2 unsuited high cards king highest (0.4862)
- Suited TQ (0.4825) E
- 2 unsuited high cards ace highest (0.4743)
- J only (0.4713)
- Suited TK (0.4682) F
- Q only (0.4681)
- K only (0.4649)
- A only (0.4640)
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 5, 0 high cards (0.4431)
- Garbage, discard everything (0.3597)
Rare Exceptions:
- A
- 4 to a flush beats 3 to a royal if royal includes a ten and
ace, and the unsuited card is a 10 or straight penalty card.
- B
- 4 to an inside straight beats suited jack and queen with 9 or
flush penalty card.
- C
- 3 to a straight flush, spread 5, with 1 high card vs. 4 to an
inside straight, with 3 high cards: Play the straight flush if
there is no straight penalty card.
- D
- Suited 10 and jack vs. an unsuited jack and king: If there is
no flush penalty card then keeping the 10 and jack then that is
the better play, otherwise keep the jack and king.
- E
- Suited 10 and queen vs. an unsuited queen and ace: If there is
no flush penalty card then keeping the 10 and queen then that is
the better play, otherwise keep the queen and ace.
- F
- Suited 10, king vs. king only: Normally the suited ten and
king is better than the king alone, however if you must discard a
9 and a flush penalty card then hold the king only.
Key:
- T
- 10
- J
- Jack
- Q
- Queen
- K
- King
- A
- Ace
Hands that are never played:
By request I have removed hands that are never played from the
list. Either some subset of these hands are better than the larger
hand, or discarding everything is better. In parenthesis I put what
you should do with these hands.
- Suited 10 and ace (keep the ace only)
- 3 unsuited high cards, ace highest (keep the lowest two high
cards)
- 4 to an inside straight, 2 high cards (keep the two high
cards)
- 4 to an inside straight, 1 high card (keep the single high
card)
- 4 to an inside straight, 0 high cards (discarding everything)
Terms:
High card: A jack, queen, king, or ace. These cards are
retained more often because if paired up they return the original
bet.
Outside straight: An open ended straight that can be
completed at either end, such as (7,8,9,10).
Inside straight: A straight with a missing inside card,
such as (6,7,9,10).
Spread: This refers to the number of ranks spread apart
the cards are toward a potential straight, straight flush, or royal
flush. The smaller the spread the better the odds are for the
player. For example a suited 5, 6, an 8 would be 3 to a straight
flush with a spread of 4 because they cards span 4 ranks.
Penalty card: Sometimes one must discard a potentially
useful card. In rare situations cards you would never keep can still
tip the scales in favor of one hand over another. For example take
the situation in footnote F. The player has a king of clubs, 10 of
clubs, 9 of spades, 6 of clubs, and a 3 of diamonds. The best
options are to either keep the suited 10 and king or the king only.
The suited 10 and king is usually the better option. However in this
scenario two potentially useful cards would be discarded, the 9
(lowering the odds of forming a straight), and the 6 of clubs
(lowering the odds of forming a flush). These two penalty cards
degrade the value of the suited 10 and king to below that of keeping
the king only.
It should be mentioned that this strategy is mainly for academic
interest or only the most avid video poker players. For practical
purposes I recommend my simple
strategy with a return of 99.46% or my intermediate
strategy with a return of 99.52%.
MethodologyTo determine the above strategy I
created a program can determine the expected return of the best play
of any hand. The way it works is to consider all 32 ways to play a
hand. For every play the program systematically scores the held
cards with every possible set of discards and averages the results.
The play that yields the greatest average is determined to be the
best play and the specific statistics for that play are displayed.
The program can also show the statistics for non-optimal plays.
Using this program it was then a time consuming task to try numerous
borderline hands and rank them in order of expected return. I used
Bob Dancer's 9/6
Jacks or Better Video Poker report to verify my strategy. There
I found some obscure exceptions that I did not notice, which I used
to correct my strategy. So I would like to thank Bob Dancer for his
help. You may order his software and strategy cards here.
Other Video Poker Games and InformationJacks or
better simple
strategy. Jacks or better intermediate
strategy. Go to the video poker main
page. Go to optimal strategy for deuces
wild. Go to expected
return tables for other forms of video poker. Jacks or better
practice
quiz.
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