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Poker Chips Falling

How To Play
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Widedeck Poker Crib Sheet
Poker Chips Falling

RULES

The same
Mechanics are identical to Texas Hold'em - 2 hole cards, flop, turn and river.

Different
Play both hole cards and three of the community cards. You cannot play the board.

This ensures all players have a distinct best 5 card hand.


 

Suit Hierarchy and Hand Comparison

 

Widedeck Poker uses a fixed suit hierarchy to resolve otherwise equal hands, ensuring there are no ties. 

The suit hierarchy, from highest to lowest, is:

Ruby → Emerald → Sapphire → Gold → Silver → Bronze

 
Design Note (Intentional, Not Optional)
 
Suit hierarchy is a primary strategic axis in Widedeck Poker.
It is not a tie-breaker, and it is not cosmetic.

Players are expected to:

  • value suit selection pre-flop

  • recognise suit-driven dominance post-flop

  • adapt strategy accordingly


Hand Comparison Order

When comparing two hands of the same hand class, Widedeck applies the following order without exception:

  1. Hand ranking (e.g. one-pair of Aces vs one-pair of Aces)

  2. Suit hierarchy of the defining card(s)

  3. Remaining card ranks (kickers), only if still required

 

Suit hierarchy therefore takes precedence over kicker rank.

Hands Defined by Suit

 

For hands explicitly defined by suit (including 4-Flush, Flush, and Straight Flush): 

  • A higher-ranked suit always beats a lower-ranked suit

  • Card ranks within the hand are compared only if the suits are identical

 

Example:
A Ruby Flush beats an Emerald Flush, regardless of kicker cards.

Widedeck Poker Cards

What Is A Good
Starting Hand?

Pairs  A pair of Aces, Kings, Queens or Jacks are strong. Having a Ruby in your pocket pair makes them even stronger. Note, the suits within your hand are often more important than the rank.
 

Drawback : Straights are impossible when you hold a pocket pair


Suited Connectors: Two hole cards of the same suit can pay dividends in WideDeck due to the introduction of a 4-Flush. Everyone loves suited cards which 'connect' as you get the added benefit of hitting straights.
 

Detail : Flush strength is based on the suit, not the high card.

High cards Ace-King and other combinations of high cards can be played aggressively pre-flop, especially with high-ranking suits.

Problem :  Running into AA or KK is far more common in WideDeck

Poker Variant

4-Flush

Ranking above a straight, the 4-flush is when your 5 card hand includes 4 of a specific suit.

It allows for semi-bluffs, big draws and can often be nutted on unpaired boards.

2-Pairs

One Pair is rarely good enough at showdown -
so two pairs become more important.


Two Pair hands are compared in the following order:

  1. Rank of the higher pair

  2. Rank of the lower pair

  3. If both pair ranks are identical, compare suit hierarchy of the higher pair

The highest straight in Widedeck is:

A-K-Q-J-T (Ace-high straight)

  • Straights are ordered by the rank of their highest card

  • Ace can be used as the highest card

  • Any other valid straight (including A-6-7-8-9) ranks below it

A-6-7-8-9 is the new Wheel

 

If two players both make A-K-Q-J-T, then:

  • the suit of the Ace (the highest card) determines the winner using Widedeck’s suit hierarchy

Example: How Do Suits Work?

Player 1

Widedeck Sapphire Ace
Widedeck Jack of Sapphires

Player 2

Widedeck Silver Ace
Widedeck Ruby king

Flop

Widedeck Ruby Ace
Widedeck Emerald 7
Widedeck Sapphire 6

Turn

Widedeck Gold King

River

Widedeck 8 of sapphires

Player 1 is holding Ace-Jack of Sapphires, Player 2 holds Silver Ace-Ruby King. 

Ace-Jack is leading because the Ace of Sapphires is higher than the Ace of Silver.
The Kicker is secondary to suit

 

Both players pay to see the flop which reveals an Ace- Seven- Six.
Both players hit a Pair of Aces, but Player 1 has the higher Pair of Aces.

 

On the turn, the Gold King gives Player 2 Two Pairs: Aces & Kings.
Player 1 has one pair, and only has five outs

The 8 of sapphires on the River is one of those outs, giving player 1 a 4-flush.
On this board, he holds the best hand possible, also known as the nuts.



 

The One-Page Widedeck Summary

If you remember nothing else:

  • Use both hole cards + exactly three board cards
  • Suits have real hierarchy
  • Sets are common
  • Top pair is fragile
  • Straights include A-6-7-8-9
  • 4-Flush sits above straight
  • Kickers are secondary
  • There are no ties
 
You’re ready to play.
Widedeck Poker - Rules Explained (FAQ)
 
Can you play the board in Widedeck Poker?

 

No. Players must use both hole cards and exactly three community cards to form their final five-card hand.

Are there ties or split pots in Widedeck Poker?

 

No. Widedeck Poker uses a fixed suit hierarchy to break all otherwise-equal outcomes, so every hand produces a single winner.

Do suits matter in Widedeck Poker?

 

Yes. Suits have a fixed hierarchy and are used as a final ordering mechanism when hands are otherwise equal by rank.

What is the suit hierarchy in Widedeck Poker?

 

From highest to lowest:
Ruby → Emerald → Sapphire → Gold → Silver → Bronze

What is a 4-Flush?

 

A 4-Flush is a hand that contains four cards of the same suit.
It ranks above a straight and below a full house.

 

What is the highest straight in Widedeck Poker?

 

The highest straight is A-K-Q-J-T (Ace-high straight) with the Ace of Rubies.
If two players make the same straight, the suit of the highest card determines the winner.

How are hands compared?
 

Hands are compared in this order:
1. Hand Ranking
2. Suit hierarchy of the defining cards
3. Remaining card ranks only if required.​



 

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