Video Poker Pay Charts One should not forget that a profound examination of the pay table for a particular video poker game will lead the player to the full-pay games, which will provide them with the best possible return on what was bet. We still recommend using the full chart, but many players want to play without worrying about small strategic adjustments. Now you know how to play Jacks or Better video poker, the popular pay tables, and the best strategy. Always play on a 9 / 6 machine, bet five coins per hand, and use a strategy chart.
A video poker strategy card will show you the correct way to play every hand dealt to you. Think of it as a “cheat sheet,” an aid that you can (legally) use when you play video poker to help you make the correct play (meaning you will be keeping the cards that have the highest expected value).
I was recently playing video poker in a Mississippi casino when a man sat down and began playing a machine adjacent to me. He initiated some small talk while we played, and I learned that he was visiting the coast, this was his last day in town, and he was in the red so far playing video poker. Today, he was hoping to hit a royal flush and at least break even.
We were both playing 9/6 Jacks-or-Better and periodically chatting, and to be frank, I wasn’t paying much attention to what he was doing, or whether he was winning or losing. Then he surprised me when he asked me this question: “How should I play this hand?”
Normally, I don’t offer playing advice to other players unless they ask. This fellow seemed nice, so I stopped playing and glanced at his screen to see what he was dealt. He had the following hand:
His dilemma was whether to hold the four-card flush and draw one card (and hope it was another spade for a winning five-card flush), or hold the three-card royal flush and draw two cards (and hope he was dealt the queen and jack of spades for a paying royal flush…a 1 in 1,081 shot).
I told him that the better play was to hold the three-card royal flush and draw two cards (even with the long odds). He seemed reluctant to do so, but he followed my advice. He held the three-card royal and hit the draw button…and you can take a wild guess what happened next. Up popped the queen and king of spades for a $2,000 royal flush. (He was playing a 50-cent denomination machine). I was happy for him, and he was thankful for the advice I had given him.
Let’s pause for a moment and play a “what if” game. What if I wasn’t playing next to him when he got that hand? Do you think he would have decided to hold the three-card royal and claimed that $2,000 royal flush? What if someone else was playing next to him—do you think that player would have given him the same advice?
We’ll never know for sure what could have happened under these circumstances, but consider this: if he’d had a strategy card with him, it wouldn’t have made any difference who was playing next to him (or even if nobody was next him), because he could have simply glanced at his card and known the right play. Get my point?
It’s unfortunate that so few video poker players carry video poker strategy cards with them when they play. In fact, the next time you go to a casino, glance down an aisle of video poker machines and see how many players have strategy cards. I’ll bet you won’t find one. Why is that? Several years ago, I decided to find out for myself by randomly asking a dozen or so video poker players this question. This is what they told me.
Let me address these three points. First, pocketsize strategy cards for video poker players are commercially available for players (just check the ads in this magazine). Secondly, I can unequivocally state that strategy cards are legal to use in all gambling jurisdictions. Therefore, that leaves the third excuse—namely, how to use a strategy card, which I will now address.
A video poker strategy card will show you the correct way to play every hand dealt to you. Think of it as a “cheat sheet,” an aid that you can (legally) use when you play video poker to help you make the correct play (meaning you will be keeping the cards that have the highest expected value).
Strategy cards contain a table of hand rankings with the hands at the top of the table having a higher rank than the hands below. By way of example, the table below shows the top five lines of strategy from a commercially available 9/6 Jacks-or-Better strategy card (by Bob Dancer and Liam Daily). All you do is look at your hand and determine whether you have any of the hands listed on the strategy card, and if you do, hold the hand that is closest to the top of the table.
Recreational Strategy Card
TWO PAIR or higher paying combinations, except:break a FLUSH or STRAIGHT for a 4-card royal flush |
Any 4-card straight flush |
HIGH PAIR (JJ-AA) |
3-card royal flush |
4-card flush |
Remember the hand that the player had sitting next to me? If you start at the top of the table and go down, you’ll find the 3-card royal flush on line 4, and the four-card flush on line 5. The 3-card royal flush is higher to the top of the table then the 4-card flush; therefore, the correct way to play the hand is to hold the 3-card royal flush. Pretty simple, huh?
Look at the following hand. How would you play it on a 9/6 Jacks-or-Better machine?
The hand is a paying five-card straight, which many players would automatically hold for an instant payoff of 4X your bet. However, there is a better play: give up the paying straight, and instead hold the four-card royal flush (10, Jack, Queen, and King of hearts). If you weren’t sure whether to hold the paying straight or the four-card royal, and you had a handy strategy card with you, you would have instantly seen that the correct play is to hold the four-card royal (see line 1 in the strategy table, which reads: “break a flush or straight for a four-card royal flush”).
By the way, my late father-in-law was dealt this exact hand, and because he referred to his strategy card, he held the four-card royal and was dealt the ace of hearts for a royal flush.
I hope I’ve convinced you to invest a few bucks in a strategy card, and refer to it when you aren’t sure how to play to a hand. It’s money well spent.
Tamburin’s Tip Of the Month
There are many different video poker games with different payoff schedules. In most cases, each game and payoff schedule has its own playing strategy. Therefore, if you’re going to play 9/6 Jacks-or-Better you should use a strategy card specifically for that game and payoff schedule. As a last resort, you can always print the proper playing strategy from any number of video poker websites and take the printed copy with you when you play. Two good sites that have accurate video poker strategies that you can print are the video poker page on www.wizardofodds.com and the Strategy Guide page on www.vpgenius.com).
Henry Tamburin is a blackjack and video poker expert. He hosts the smartgaming.com website and is the editor of the Blackjack Insider newsletter (for a free three-month subscription, visit www.bjinsider.com/free). For a free copy of his Casino Gambling Catalog, which contains books, strategy cards and software for video poker players, call toll free 1-888-353-3234, or visit the web store at www.smartgaming.com.