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In Caribbean
Stud Poker, we'll look at the ranks of the hands and payout
schedules, how tie hands are resolved, what the dealer's qualifying
hand means and how it affects your strategies, the best times
to double your bet and increase your winning chances, the ante,
call bet, playing, and progressive bet strategies, the house
percentage, and what the aggregate payout means to you.
In Let it Ride, we'll cover the basics of play, winning poker
hands, object of the game, the player's first and second option,
the third and fourth card strategies for taking down bets or
letting them ride including advanced strategies, the showdown,
the house percentage, the Tournament and Bonus bets, and much
more to give you a complete picture on how the game is played
and how you can beat the odds to be a winner.
Both of these games are similar to poker in that they share
the hand values, but it is there that the similarity ends. These
games are played against the casino, not against other players,
there is no bluffing, and payoffs come as a result of achieving
a predetermined poker hand.
Let it Ride strictly follows this formula and adds the novelty
of allowing you to remove bets if you don't like your hand,
which is a great feature. You can also make an additional bet
which will qualify you for a large bonus payout. Caribbean Stud
Poker also has the additional bet for a large payout, actually
a progressive jackpot, and takes the opposite approach of Let
it Ride. Here, if you like your hand, you can actually bet more
after you've seen your cards. Unlike Let it Ride, where players
win strictly by having hands strong enough to qualify for payouts,
in Caribbean Stud Poker, the hand wins either by the dealer
defaulting with a weak hand, or if the hand is strong enough,
by beating the dealers hand.
There is much to learn with these new games and we'll get to
that now.
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