Wednesday, September 15, 2010

American Roulette

American Roulette


Win big with the small wheel. Chose your favorite color, pick a lucky number, keep your lucky charm handy and see a rupee into a thousand! With myriad betting options before you, winning big money was never this easy

Rules of play

Roulette players have a variety of betting options. Placing 'inside' bets is either selecting the exact number of the pocket the ball will land in, or a small range of pockets based on their proximity on the layout. Players wishing to bet on the 'outside' will select bets on larger positional groupings of pockets, the pocket color, or whether the winning number is odd or even.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Poker,card games,Poker games


Poker is a family of card games that share betting rules and usually (but not always) hand rankings. Poker games differ in how the cards are dealt, how hands may be formed, whether the high or low hand wins the pot in a showdown (in some games, the pot is split between the high and low hands), limits on bets and how many rounds of betting are allowed. In most modern poker games, the first round of betting begins with some form of forced bet. The action then proceeds to the left. Each player in turn must either match the maximum previous bet or fold, losing the amount bet so far and all further interest in the hand. A player who matches a bet may also raise, increasing the bet. The betting round ends when all players have either matched the last bet or folded. If all but one player folds on any round, the remaining player collects the pot without showing his hand. If more than one player remains in contention after the final betting round, the hands are shown and the winning hand takes the pot.[1]

poker player and website owner


Shirley Rosario is a professional poker player and website owner. Born in San Pedro, California, she grew up in Torrance, California and currently resides in Downey.[1]
Rosario is a former prop player at the Bicycle Casino.[2] As a prop, Rosario played a wide variety of games. In addition to her prop duties, she was a commentator for the casino's Live at the Bike show, which featured ring game poker games broadcast live over the Internet. The show later aired on The Poker Channel in the UK under the name The L.A. Poker Scene.[3] Rosario spent 2006 recovering from cancer surgery. She is currently cancer free.[1When not playing the game, she works on the business side of poker by owning and operating her own website, Poker-Babes.com.[8] Rosario has been quoted as an expert on women in poker by The Times

Poker Babes


Poker Babes
Poker was once a man's game, but not anymore. My name is Shirley Rosario, and welcome to my world.
While the majority of successful poker players are men, more female players are getting involved and taking the game seriously as a way to make money. They also bring a different perspective to the game, because even in this day and age, there is still a lot of "us versus them" thinking among male players. And thank goodness, because when my opponents think that way, it makes me money. My ongoing adventures in the poker world are detailed in my Poker Journal (linked at the top of the page).

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Variations,Straight,Stud poker,Draw poker,Community card poker ,seven-card stud,


Variations
Poker has many variations, all following a similar pattern of play and generally using the same hand ranking hierarchy. There are three main families of variants, largely grouped by the protocol of card-dealing and betting:

Straight
A complete hand is dealt to each player, and players bet in one round, with raising and re-raising allowed. This is the oldest poker family; the root of the game as currently played was a game known as Primero, which evolved into the game three-card brag, a very popular gentleman's game around the time of the American Revolutionary War and still enjoyed in the U.K. today. Straight hands of five cards are sometimes used as a final showdown, but poker is currently virtually always played in a more complex form to allow for additional strategy.
Stud poker
Cards are dealt in a prearranged combination of face-down and face-up rounds, or streets, with a round of betting following each. This is the next-oldest family; as poker progressed from three to five-card hands, they were often dealt one card at a time, either face-down or face-up, with a betting round between each. The most popular stud variant today, seven-card stud, deals two extra cards to each player (three face-down, four face-up) from which they must make the best possible 5-card hand.
Draw poker
A complete hand is dealt to each player, face-down, and after betting, players are allowed to attempt to change their hand (with the object of improving it) by discarding unwanted cards and being dealt new ones. Five-card draw is the most famous variation in this family.

Gameplay


Gameplay
Gameplay
In casual play, the right to deal a hand typically rotates among the players and is marked by a token called a dealer button (or buck). In a casino, a house dealer handles the cards for each hand, but the button (typically a white plastic disk) is rotated clockwise among the players to indicate a nominal dealer to determine the order of betting.

One or more players are usually required to make forced bets, usually either an ante or a blind bet (sometimes both). The dealer shuffles the cards, the player on the chair to their right cuts, and the dealer deals the appropriate number of cards to the players one at a time, beginning with the player to their left. Cards may be dealt either face-up or face-down, depending on the variant of poker being played. After the initial deal, the first of what may be several betting rounds begins. Between rounds, the players' hands develop in some way, often by being dealt additional cards or replacing cards previously dealt. At the end of each round, all bets are gathered into the central pot.

Friday, April 2, 2010


pokerstars_news One of PokerStars' newest members of Team Pro Online has just become the very first person to reach the level of Supernova Elite for 2010. While that's a remarkable achievement, it's sort of become old hat for Lind. Below, you'll find Lind's reasoning for working so fast, how he did it, and what it took to reach Supernova Elite in less than three months. First by George "Jorj95" Lind On March 30 I became the first Supernova Elite on Poker Stars this year.