Crazy Pineapple is a texas hold'em game very similar to regular texas
hold'em.
There are only two significant differences in pineapple texas hold'em,
however, which do change the game a lot.
DIFFERENCE #1: YOU START WITH THREE HOLE CARDS
In regular texas hold'em, you start with two hole cards. In Pineapple, you
start with three, creating many more possible good starting hands, and
many more hands that can work with the flop.
DIFFERENCE #2: IN PINEAPPLE, YOU THROW A HOLE CARD AWAY!
Just as in regular texas hold'em, there is a betting round after you
receive your hole cards, and another betting round after you see the flop.
However, in Pineapple a very important change happens here. AFTER betting
on the flop is completed, you must discard one of your hole cards.
For example, if you start with a hand of (8h-8s-Jh) and then see a flop of
10h-9h-8d, you have a pretty big decision to make. If you want to keep
your open-ended straight flush draw, you're going to have to discard one
of your trip eights (a pleasant dilemma, but a dilemma nonetheless). If
you want to keep the trips, you need to throw away the the key card in the
straight flush draw.
Pineapple really is an odd hybrid of texas hold'em and Omaha. The average
winning hands are stronger in Pineapple than they are in texas hold'em,
because you get to look at more combinations on the flop. Occasionally you
will make a stronger hand in Pineapple than you would have in Omaha, even
though you get four hole cards in Omaha, because Pineapple does not share
the Omaha "you must use two and exactly two of your hole cards in your
final hand" rule.
For example, if your Omaha hand was Ac-Qd-Jc-10d, and the final community
board was Ah-As-5c-5h-8c, you do NOT have a full house, but rather only
trip aces with a Q-8 kicker, because you must play at least two cards from
your hand and can't just add the ace in your hand to the two pair on board
to make aces full of fives. In pineapple, had you kept an ace in your hand
after the post-flop discard, the five on the turn would have given you a
full house, just as if you'd started with A-J or A-Q in texas hold'em.
You'll find Pineapple a fun game to play, because of the extra strong
flops and extra key decision about what cards to keep after the flop
Crazy
Pineapple 8/b Poker Rules
Crazy Pineapple 8/b plays like regular Crazy Pineapple until the end of
the hand, when the pot may be split between the high hand and the low
hand, if any.
WHAT DOES '8/b' MEAN?
8/B refers to the low hand, and means that, if a low hand exists, it must
consist of cards valued at 8 or lower. If a low hand doesn't exist, the
high hand wins the entire pot. There is ALWAYS a qualifying high hand.
Qualifying low hands consist of five cards with different numerical values
from Ace to 8. If multiple players meet this standard, the player with the
lowest high card will win the low hand and split the pot with the high
hand (e.g. Ah, 2d, 5c, 6c 7d BEATS Ac, 2c, 6d, 7h, 8d). The best low hand
is A, 2, 3, 4, 5 - straights and flushes do not count against a low hand,
but a pair will disqualify it. An easy way to think of a low hand score is
to look at the two highest cards in that hand. For example, an A, 2, 3, 4,
6 scores a 64, and would therefore beat an A, 2, 3, 5, 6 because it's
score would be 65.
The high and low hands consist of five cards from the total of seven
available at the showdown (your two pocket cards plus the five community
cards), but you don't have to use the same 7 cards for both high & low
hands. If your pocket cards are Ad, 7d, and the board is 2d, 3c, 4c, 5d,
6d - you have a low hand of A-5, and a high hand of Ace high flush.
One final point - players do not need to decide if they are playing for a
high hand or a low hand, as all hands in the showdown will be evaluated
for both and ranked automatically by our software.
BUT I WANT IT ALL!!!
The value of potentially sharing the pot between a high hand and a low
hand is that there is more action in the game. Some will play for the
high, and some for the low. But sometimes you can play for both! As
mentioned above, straights and flushes do not count against a low hand. So
if you have Ac, 2c, 3c, 4c, 5c, you will share in the low hand pot (it may
split between you and other A-5 straights), and your straight flush would
certainly put you in good position for the high hand also.
Poker Prize Club lets you
win free cash prizes each and every month. You can win just by doing
something that interests you, playing poker online. For each online poker room
you join through Poker Prize Club, you may enter each
current and all future sweepstakes one time. The more online poker rooms you join, the more
times you may enter each sweepstakes.