Top Things To Know About Poker

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The Origin of the Poker Chip. Until the late 1800s, poker “chips” consisted of just about any small valuable object—anything from gold nuggets, or even gold dust, to coins. Desperately in need of standardized units, saloons and gaming houses crafted chips out of ivory, bone, clay and wood, decorated with unique symbols. Daniel Negreanu is a reputable high-stakes poker player with an impressive record. However, there are a couple of things that you probably don’t know about Negreanu. Read on for top 5 things you didn’t know about Daniel Negreanu. He is a staunch vegan. Did you know Negreanu is a vegan? Well, now you know. The game is a split-pot game, with half the pot going to the player with the best Hold'em hand and the other half going to the player with the best Omaha hand. Each player is dealt six cards, and each player must then separate their cards into two hands, a two-card Hold'em hand and a four-card Omaha hand.

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1. He's a committed vegan

Negreanu's mum might have tried to steer him down a healthy eating route, with packed lunches winning out over McDonalds, but when he hit Vegas as a poker pro his diet suffered. 'I ate the typical meat-heavy diet of most poker players in the 90s,' Negreanu said. 'Burgers and steak, along with French fries, mash, and a bucket load of wine, beer, and vodka. There was nothing fresh in my diet and I felt terrible.' He gave up meat in 2000 but really started focusing on his food in 2006 when he went vegan. He now considers himself a 'student of nutrition', gets tips online and eats a completely gluten-free diet. So what does the world's most successful poker player eat on tour? Protein bars, coconut water, almond milk, chia seeds and lots of fresh fruit and vegetables.

2. He wanted to be an actor

When Kid Poker was just a kid he dreamed of making it as an actor. At the age of 12 he auditioned for the role of Tommy in the movie The New Adventures of Pippy Longstocking. He says he aced it and was one of six kids to get a call back, but the film was shelved. That wasn't the end of his fledgling acting career though. He was offered the lead role of Seymour in the Little Shop of Horrors musical at Vanier High School, but turned it down as he was worried about his vocals. He relented when his teacher told him the geeky Seymour wasn't supposed to be a good singer.

3. Wasn't that...?

Eagle eyed poker fans might have spotted Negreanu in a couple of high profile cameo roles from 2009. In X-Men Origins: Wolverine you can find him in a funky yellow shirt playing pokerwith Gambit. Wolverine tries to join the game but gets short shrift and a mocking glance from Kid Poker. His poker moves might be his own but we doubt he's worn the shirt since - not even Negreanu could make those collars work. He was also tapped up by Katy Perry for her Waking Up In Vegas video. Perry gets the better of Negreanu, winning a monster pot in a poker hand that was made for Hollywood. He gets it in with Kings against Aces, flops quads and still finds a way to lose the hand. What are the odds?

Poker

4. He wanted to be a professional pool player

It seems that Negreanu was destined to find fame and fortune on the baize... When he was a teenager he wanted to be a pool pro and spent his teenage years at the Palace Club Billiards hall hustling people and playing the weekly pool tournament. The Fall Classic was the big annual pool event and Negreanu remembers 'ripping through the field' one year and making the final. His opponent was Paul Chan, someone he'd already beaten earlier in the day, but he couldn't get past him a second time. Chan denied him the title in a thrilling 3-2 reversal but Negreanu got $500 for second place, his biggest cash at the time. The pool hall was where he learned the rules of poker and pool was put on the backburner when he moved to Vegas to make it as a pro.

5. He went on The Millionaire Matchmaker

Negreanu was prepared to go the distance to find his soul mate and that led to an appearance on the American reality TV show The Millionaire Matchmaker. Patti Stanger's show tries to match a millionaire with his/her ideal partner but, as Shakespeare said, 'The course of true love never did run smooth.' That was certainly the case for Negreanu whose Vegas date started off badly when the air conditioning on his private jet failed and ended when his date passed out on him mid-kiss in the early hours of the morning. You can get the full story from Negreanu himself here.

6. He's taken the Oath of Allegiance

Negreanu might be a proud Canadian but he became a US citizen earlier in the year, clearing him to vote in the 2016 presidential election. On March 10 he tweeted, 'March 12th is my citizenship ceremony as I officially become a US Citizen. I felt it was important to get it done in time to cast my vote!'

7. He's a big Game of Thrones fan

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Negreanu likes his TV shows but he's a hard man to please. Breaking Bad didn't completely float his boat but he is a big fan of The Sopranos and, more recently, Game of Thrones. And while Negreanu might have it all - the hi-tech house complete with arcade cabinets and a giant TV that swivels through 360 degrees -it's the small things that give you the most pleasure. On a tour of his crib (see video) Negreanu geeks out over a customised 'House of Negreanu' Game of Thrones boxset that plays the theme tune when you lift the lid, answering the question, 'What do you get the man who's got everything?'

8. He loves playing soccer

An avid soccer player ('I live in the U.S. and am from Canada. The game here is called soccer, deal with it'), Negreanu is left-handed, right footed and likes playing on the left wing. Figure that one out. He was never a prolific goal scorer, although he claims he was quick and a decent passer, and he still dreams of the time he scored the winning goal in his playoff final. With the score at 0-0, Negreanu latched onto a high ball and knocked it over the head of the advancing goalkeeper into the top corner. It doesn't work out so well in his dreams. 'When I dream of that moment the ball... hits the crossbar. I could never figure out why that is...' Negreanu rekindled his love of soccer in Vegas recently, hiring the coach of the Las Vegas Legends indoor soccer team to improve his game.

9. He plays a mean game of Hearthstone

Hearthstone: Heroes of Warcraft is an incredibly addictive collectible card game played online and in eSports arenas around the world. Negreanu was in Monte Carlo when he first heard poker players talking about it and downloaded it when he got back to his hotel room. He was supposed to be at a party at 9pm ('I was all dressed up'), started playing at 8.30pm and realised he probably wasn't going to make the party at 4am. He plays a pretty good game - perhaps not surprising for someone so adept at the intricacies of poker strategy - and his Hearthstone moment came at the World Championship at BlizzCon. He took on fellow pro poker player and professional gamer Bertrand 'Elky' Grospellier in a custom-built cube in front of a rabid crowd. Negreanu won the match 3-1.

10. He's a huge hockey fan

Negreanu was born with a hockey stick in his hand and he grew up sweating his beloved Toronto Maple Leafs. In the past couple of years he's been campaigning for a Las Vegas NHL franchise and during the 2016 World Series he got the news he'd been hoping for. Traditionalists might be up in arms about the prospect of an NHL team in the desert but Negreanu thinks it's a perfect fit. Vegas already has a custom-built arena on The Strip ready to host the games in the 2017 season and Negreanu is now pondering whether to invest. 'I wouldn't buy a piece because I thought it was a good investment or a bad investment,' he said. 'I'd just do it because it's cool for me to say I own a piece of an NHL franchise.'

The Daniel Negreanu documentary KidPoker is available to watch now on Netflix in the following countries: USA, Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand


When I write about slot machines, I almost always suggest switching to video poker. Strategy matters in video poker more than almost any other casino game.

In fact, video poker has much in common with blackjack, which is the first post I wrote in this “10 basics of casino strategy” series. Not only does it offer some of the best odds in the house, but the decisions you make have a direct effect on your bottom line.

But the role of skill in a gambling game is a two-edged sword. If you make mistakes, those mistakes will cost you money.

I like that, though. I want my decisions to matter.

Here’s how to get the most out of your video poker bankroll and maximize your chances of walking away a winner.

1- Understand and Acknowledge the Differences between Video Poker and Slot Machines



A slot machine gives the house a mathematical edge by paying out prizes at odds lower than the odds of winning. In fact, this is how all casino games work. If you have 5 to 1 odds of winning, the casino is probably going to pay you 4 to 1 or 3 to 1 for winnings.

It’s easy to see how the casino makes money doing that.

The problem with slot machines is that you have no way of calculating how big or small that house edge is. That’s because you have no way of knowing what the probability of getting each of the symbols is.

To my way of thinking, this makes slot machines relatively dishonest when compared with other casino games. With roulette, I know that the odds of winning a single number bet are 37 to 1. And I know that the payoff is 35 to 1. So I can calculate how big an edge the house has.

But the way slot machine random number generators are programmed, you don’t know the probability of getting a particular symbol on a reel stop. Some of the symbols might be programmed to come up 1.8 of the time, while others might come up 1/16 of the time.

To make things even more abstruse, slot machines can look identical on the outside but have different odds on the inside. You could be playing a Wheel of Fortune slot machine where the Wheel of Fortune symbol is programmed to come up 1/16 of the time. The Wheel of Fortune machine immediately next to it might have programmed that symbol to only come up 1/24 of the time.

A video poker symbol, on the other hand, corresponds to a playing card. And the random number generator is programmed to duplicate the probability of a deck of cards. The probability of getting any specific card in a deck is 1/52.

With that information, you can compare the probabilities of winning with the payouts to determine the payback percentage for the machine.
The other major difference is that you have decisions to make in video poker that affect this payback percentage. Make good decisions, and the payback percentage goes up and the house edge goes down. Make bad decisions, and the opposite happens.

Most slot machines have a house edge of at least 8%. Most video poker games have a house edge of less than 5%, and some of them even get under 1%.

And if you’re skilled enough at playing and finding the right pay tables, you can play video poker games where you have an edge over the casino.

Understanding all this is the 1st step to becoming a winner.

A video poker pay table lists the possible hands along with the payout for each hand. These payouts are done as a “x for 1” rather than as an “x to 1” payout. You lose the amount of money you put into the hand instead of getting it back.

Here’s the difference:

In an “x for 1” payback, you lose your original bet even if you win. If a bet pays off at 5 for 1, you lose the 1 unit you bet, but you get 5 units as winnings. Your net profit is 4 units.

If a bet pays off at 5 to 1, you get to keep your 1 unit that you bet, so your net profit is 5 units.

On a video poker pay table, there’s a column on left listing the possible hands. These are based on the stand poker hand rankings, but there are some differences. Usually, this list will look like this:

  • Royal flush
  • Straight flush
  • 4 of a kind
  • Full house
  • Flush
  • Straight
  • 3 of a kind
  • 2 pair
  • A pair of jacks or higher

Then you have columns based on the number of coins you bet: 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5. The payoffs for each of those are listed.

On every video poker machine I’ve ever seen, you get a bonus payoff for the royal flush if you’re playing for 5 coins per hand. The payoff, if you’re putting 4 coins or less, is usually 200 for 1 or 250 for 1, but when you’re betting 5 coins, you get 800 for 1 instead.

That’s one of the first tenets of video poker strategy, by the way—always bet 5 coins.

You don’t have to be able to calculate the probability of getting each hand. Other people smarter than you and I have already done the work for us.

Just understand that when you multiply the probability of getting that hand by the payout for that hand, you get the expected value for that hand. Add all those together, and you have the payback percentage for the game.

The probability of getting a pair of jacks or higher is about 21.5%. The payoff is 1 unit, so the expected value for that hand is 0.215. The probability of getting 2 pairs is 12.9%, but the payoff is 2 units, so the expected value for that hand is .258.

In some games, the pay tables only change on 1 or 2 hands, so you can differentiate the better games from the worse games.

The best example of this is Jacks or Better, which I cover in detail in the next post.

3- Start by Specializing in Jacks or Better

Jacks or Better is the most basic video poker game. It pays off at 800 for 1 for a royal flush, and you get even money if you get a pair of jacks or better.

The 2 critical hands on a Jacks or Better pay table are the full house and the flush. They pay off at 9 for 1 and 6 for 1 respectively on a full pay game.


If you play a full pay Jacks or Better game with perfect strategy, the payback percentage is 99.54%. This means the house edge is 0.46%, which is better than most modern blackjack games.

But not all Jacks or Better games offer this pay table. In fact, it’s unusual. You’re more likely to find a game with an 8/6 or and 8/5 payout for those hands. In those cases, the payback percentage drops to 98.39% or 97.3% respectively.

That might not sound like much of a difference, but let’s look at it in terms of how much you can expect to lose per hour of play.

To calculate that, you multiply the house edge of the game by the total amount of money you put into action each hour. If you’re playing for $5 per hand on a Jacks or Better game, you’re probably putting $3000 into action per hour.

With a house edge of 0.46%, you’re only expected to lose $13.80 per hour.

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But with a house edge of 2.70% (which is what you face with an 8/5 machine), you’re expected to lose a whopping $81 per hour.

See what a difference a small change in a pay table makes?

But you should start by learning to find full pay Jacks or Better games and play them with perfect strategy.

4- Learn How to Find the Best Games with the Best Pay Tables



Where can you find such games?

You could just go to a random casino and look at the individual machines there. That could take a lot of time, but it might be fun wandering through there.

You could also find a website that lists what games and pay tables are available at specific casinos in specific cities. The most comprehensive directory for that information I can find is at vpFREE, which used to be a Yahoo discussion group.

Just keep in mind that these listings are current when the site publishes them, but they’re user-generated, so they could include mistakes. Casinos also change what machines they have on the floor, too.

But vpFREE is your best starting point.

Your goal when playing video poker is to get a royal flush. That’s 4000-unit payout, and it’s a surprisingly large part of your of payback percentage.

But you’ll only see a royal flush once every 40,000 hands.

Most video poker players get in about 500 hands per hour, so you’re looking at maybe 80 hours of play before hitting your royal flush. It might even be longer than that—or you might hit it early.

But if you don’t have enough money in your bankroll to avoid going broke first, you won’t ever hit that jackpot.

That you have at least $600 or $700 in your bankroll if you’re playing the quarter machines at $1.25 per hand. If you’re playing for $5 per hand, you should have between $2000 and $3000.

You still risk going broke, but you have a lower percentage of it.
This is true whether you have an edge against the casino or not. If you’re confused about that, think about it this way:
You have $5. You play one hand of video poker with that. You have a 54.54% chance of seeing a hand that doesn’t pay out. If that happens, you go broke.

Naturally, if you had $10, you’d get 2 shots at it. You’d be less likely to go broke.

6- Maximize the Effects of the Players’ Club Card



Almost no video poker game offers a payback percentage of over 100%. Some get so close that you can combine the game with the rewards from a players’ club card to get a positive expectation.

Most people already know how the players’ club card works. It tracks the amount of money you’re running through the slot machines and video poker machines. Based on that, they then give you back 0.2% or so in the form of rebates and free stuff (comps).

If you’re playing a video poker game with a payback percentage of 99.95%, and you get 0.2% back in comps, the effective payback percentage for the game goes up to 100.15%.

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How does that translate to dollars?

Find out in #7.

7- Be Satisfied with a Small Edge and Small Winnings



With an edge of just 0.15%, it’s hard to make a significant amount of money playing video poker. You can multiply your hourly action by 0.15% to get your expected profit per hour.

If you’re an average low roller playing for $1.25 per hand, you’re looking at $750 in action (600 hands per hour at $1.25 per hand.)
That’s 90 cents per hour.

If you’re playing for $5/hand instead, you’re looking at $3.60 per hour in earnings.

That’s not even minimum wage.

But I never promised you that you’d be able to earn a living from video poker, either.

When you compare the idea of losing money on a gambling game with the idea of winning money, the difference becomes more significant.

It’s not unusual to have an expected loss of $13/hour for a gambling game. Compared to earning 90 cents per hour, that’s a difference of $13.90.

Money saved is worth just as much as money won. You’re still getting to gamble and have fun, and you’re not even losing money while you’re doing it.

And, truth be told, most of the casinos offering such generous pay tables limit them to the lower stakes machines. They don’t want you to earn a living from their video poker games.

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You can also add the value of your free cocktails to your hourly expectation if that makes you feel better, too.



Once you’ve mastered full pay Jacks or Better, it’s time to start looking at other video poker games. The most appropriate of these to start with are the Bonus Poker family of games. Double Bonus, for example, has a payback percentage of 100.15% when you play with perfect strategy.

The Bonus Poker games offer larger payouts for 4 of a kind hands. The amount of that additional payout is based on the ranking of the cards making up the 4 of a kind.

The main similarity Bonus Poker has with Jacks or Better is the lack of wild cards.

But if you like wild cards, you should also learn to play Joker Poker, which has an additional wild card in the deck. Deuces Wild is also popular, although the wide variation in pay tables for that one is confusing.

9- Be Careful of Online Video Poker Games and Games at Native American Casinos


Most online video poker games are just as legit as their land casino counterparts in terms of their random number generator.

But not all of them.

I remember one specific online casino that offered a couple of different video poker games that were actually just slot machines that looked like video poker. The random number generator did NOT emulate a deck of cards, and your decisions made no difference to your final result.

And some online casinos are just flat-out cheaters. I read about one customer who played several hundred hands of video poker without winning anything on even a single hand. That’s almost impossible—less likely than winning the lottery, in fact.

REMEMBER!The video poker games at a lot of Native American casinos in the United States are also dodgy. They look like video poker games, but the random number generator just ties into the same bingo game software that their slot machine games use. This, by definition, isn’t a video poker game—it’s a slot machine game.

Worst of all, in those situations, you have no way of knowing what kind of payback percentage you can expect.



The correct strategy for each video poker variation is different. It can, in fact, vary based on the pay table.

But one thing they all have in common is that most of the time, if you’re dealt a winning hand, you’ll be reluctant to try to improve it. A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the bush.

This is true for most games and most situations, but the big exception is when you have 4 cards to a royal flush. If you have the choice of drawing to that hand while breaking up a hand that’s a sure winner, you should go for it.

The potential return is big enough in that case to make up for giving up on the sure thing.

Memorizing the exceptions to this rule is one of the key aspects to mastering video poker strategy.

The best place to learn video poker strategy is via Bob Dancer’s excellent series of video poker strategy guides.

Conclusion

Video poker might be my favorite game in the casino. I enjoy the mental challenge of making the right decisions on each hand. I like being the master of my own fate.

But winning at video poker isn’t something anyone can do just walking off the street and using some card sense. You need a big enough bankroll to avoid going broke, for one thing. You also need to understand the strategy well enough to get an edge (or at least minimize the house edge.)

This requires study and practice.

But even casual gamblers can enjoy video poker and face a lower house edge than they’d see at almost any other casino game.

They’re always a better deal than the slot machines.

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