4/12/2022

Tic Tac Poker

Tic Tac Poker Average ratng: 4,3/5 9789 reviews

Introduction

This page gives rules for a number of shared card poker games in which the shared (or community) cards are dealt in a particular configuration, and only certain sets of cards are available to be used together as part of the player's final hand. The number of variants of this type that could be invented is almost endless, and several more examples, some quite complex, will be found among the pagat.com collection of invented shared card poker variants.

These variants are normally played in private poker games, in which the players place an ante before the deal and each betting round begins with the first active player to dealer's left.

Iron Cross

  1. Tic Tac® Big Berry Adventure. A delightful mix of rich raspberry and juicy blueberry flavors.
  2. Tic Tac Toe This game is also sometimes known as Criss Cross. Two cards are dealt face down to each player and nine face down cards in a 3x3 grid to the table. In the showdown, players use their two cards together with any row (8-1-5, 4-9-2 or 7-3-6) or any column (8-4-7, 1-9-3 or 5-2-6) or either diagonal (8-9-6 or 5-9-7) to make a poker hand.
  3. Tic-A-Tac Poker is a strange mix between two disparate things, but Treemo pulls it off well and with style. Even if you don't have a weekly card game to go to, this is a fun way to kill 10 free.

Tic A Tac Poker combines Poker and Tic Tac Toe to create an all-new poker game with eight opportunities to put together your best hands. Play down, across or diagonally as you place your cards very carefully and strategically on the Some of Treemo’s Features.

In this game, also known as Church or Criss Cross, five cards are dealt face down to each player, and five cards face down to the table in the shape of a cross - see diagram.

There is a betting round, and then the cards are turned face up in the order indicated, with another betting round after each card is exposed.

In the showdown, each player can use two or more of their five cards together with cards from the cross to form their hand, but the shared cards used must all come either from the horizontal line of three cards (4-5-2) or all from the vertical line (1-5-3).

Variations

The centre card and all cards of the same rank may be wild.

Poker

This game can be played high-low, either with declaration or with the highest and lowest hands simply sharing the pot.

Iron Cross is sometimes played with only four cards dealt to each player.

The number of betting rounds can be reduced, for example by betting only after the deal, after cards 1 and 2, after cards 3 and 4 and before the showdown.

Tic Tac Toe

This game is also sometimes known as Criss Cross. Two cards are dealt face down to each player and nine face down cards in a 3x3 grid to the table. In the showdown, players use their two cards together with any row (8-1-5, 4-9-2 or 7-3-6) or any column (8-4-7, 1-9-3 or 5-2-6) or either diagonal (8-9-6 or 5-9-7) to make a poker hand.

Tic Tac Powermint Singles

The cards may be revealed one at a time in the order shown in the diagram with a betting round after each, but that would result in a lot of betting rounds. Therefore some players prefer to reveal the cards in groups, for example 1, 2, 3, 4; betting round; 5, 6, 7, 8; betting round; 9; betting round and showdown. Another possibility is to flip the top row (8-1-5), then the bottom row (7-3-6), then the middle row (4-9-2) with a betting round after each row.

Some deal four cards to each player rather than two, and the player must use exactly two of them witha row column or diagonal of three cards from the table.

Some deal four cards to each player and the player may use 2, 3 or all 4 of these together with 3, 2 or 1 cards from any row, column or diagonal.

Some play that the centre card (9) and all cards of the same rank are wild.

The game can be played high only or high-low with declaration. When played high-low, the high and low hands can be made independently, each using a different row, column or diagonal of the grid.

Tic Tac Toe with Posts

In this version of Tic Tac Toe, as well as placing antes, each player puts up three stakes known as 'posts'.

Two cards are dealt face down to each player and a 3x3 grid of cards is dealt face up to the table. After a single round of betting, surviving players expose their two cards and declare what is their best hand (the cards do not speak for themselves). The best hand wins the pot and all other players (including those who folded) must place one of their posts into a separate 'posts pot'.

All players discard their two-card hands but the 3x3 grid remains in place. There is a new deal of two cards face down to each player from the cards that remain in the deck, and there is another round of betting and a new showdown.

Tic

This is repeated as many times as necessary. Only those players who still have at least one token are dealt a hand, and if there are insufficient cards remaining to deal them two cards each, all the unused and discarded cards are shuffled to make a new 43-card deck (the 9-card layout remaining in place) and the cards are dealt from that.

When all but one player have losts all their posts, the last surviving player collects the posts pot and the game ends.

The players who still with no actual betting rounds. The result depends only on the deal and on the players correctly identifying what hands they can make.

Tic Tac Toe with choice

Each player is dealt three cards, face down and a grid of nine cards is dealt face down to the table. The player to dealer's left must place a blind, which begins the first betting round.

The last player who bet or raised (if everyone just called or folded this will be the player to dealer's left) chooses two of the down cards to turn face up. Any two cards may be chosen except for the centre card (9), which is the last card revealed. There is another round of betting, which begins with a compulsory bet by the first active player to the left of whoever chose which cards to turn.

This is repeated until the eight outer cards are turned up, after which there is a round of betting with no compulsory bet, begun by the active player to the left of the player who exposed the last two outer cards. Then the centre card is revealed.

In the showdown, each surviving player makes their best 5 card poker hand, using either three cards from their hand and two from the board, or 2 from their hand and three from the board. As usual the board cards must come from a single row, column or diagonal.

The pot, then, is split between the player with the best five card hand made using these rules, and the person who has the highest private card of the same suit as the centre card of the grip. Any odd chip remaining stays in the pot for the next hand. If no surviving player can match the suit of the center card, the whole pot goes to the holder of the high poker hand. If all but one player folded, the last player in takes the whole pot.

Pyramid

There are several shared card games with this name, their only common feature being that the layout is triangular in shape.

Three intersecting rows

Four cards are dealt face down to each player and six face down to the pyramid as shown in the diagram. The cards are turned face up in the order shown, with a betting round after each.

This is a high-low game with declaration. At the showdown, each surviving player will combine 2, 3 or 4 cards from hand with 3, 2 or 1 cards from the table, but all the table cards used must come from just one of the three sides of the triangle (4-1-5, 4-3-6 or 6-2-5). A player going for both high and low must make both hands from the same seven cards.

Wild cards, shared cards and kill cards

Five cards are dealt face down to each player and nine to a pyramid as shown in the diagram.

After the first betting round the top row of cards is turned face up. All cards of these ranks are wild, but the cards themselves are not available to be used by the players.

After the second round of betting the second row is turned face up. These three cards are shared cards, available to be used by all players along with their hand cards to make a poker hand.

After the third round of betting the last row of four cards is turned up. All cards of the same ranks as these cards, both in the middle row of the pyramid and in the players' hands, must be discarded.

There is a fourth round of betting followed by a showdown.

Other variants

Tic Tac Toe Poker

Here is a version of Pyramid contributed Sq2yard.

Yukon Hold'em

According to a (now deleted) Wikipedia article, this game originated in Alaska during the 1970’s and subsequently gained some popularity in the northwestern United States and Canada.

The betting and play proceed exactly as in Texas Hold'em, except the configuration of shared cards is different.

  1. After the initial betting round, instead of a flop of three cards, the dealer deals two flops of two shared cards face up to the table.
  2. After the second betting round the dealer deals two 'turn' cards, one added to each pair of flop cards.
  3. After the third betting round the dealer deals a single 'river' card.

There is then a final betting round and a showdown. At this point there are seven cards face up on the table: two sets of three each consisting of a two-card flop and the associated turn, and a single river card. Each player can use only one of the sets of three cards (flop + turn) together with the river card and hole cards to make a poker hand.

Z

Five cards are dealt face down to each player and four cards to the table in a Z-shape, as shown in the diagram.

There is a betting round, and then the cards are flipped face up in the order shown, with a new betting round after each card is exposed.

Hands are formed from exactly three of a player's hole cards together with two adjacent cards from the layout - that is: 1&3, 3&4, or 4&2.

This is a high-low game without declaration. In the showdown, the highest and lowest hands split the pot. Low hands use ace-to-five ranking and must be 8-down or lower to qualify. If there is no qualifying low hand, the high hand wins the whole pot.

Elevator

Four cards are dealt to each player and seven face down on the table, as shown in the diagram. In the showdown, each player will choose the position of the elevator 'E' (top, middle or bottom) and will then be able to use three cards in a straight line including the elevator along with his or her four hand cards to form the highest and/or lowest five-card hand. The line can be horzontal or diagonal. In other words, the cards available to a player are the four hole cards plus one of the following five sets from the table: 1-E-4, 1-E-6, 2-E-5, 3-E-6, 3-E-4.

The seven table cards are turned up one at a time, each followed by a betting round. This should be done in a sequence that delays as long as possible showing two or three cards that can be used together - for example 5, 1, 3, 2, 4, 6, E. Players then declare whether they are going for high, low or both. If both, the high and low hands must both be made from the same seven-card set.

Variations

  • The elevator card 'E' may be wild.
  • Players going both ways may be allowed to use different rows from the table for their high and low hands.

Have you been searching for Pick 3 lottery workout systems that actually work? Are you tired of guessing and relying on luck? Well here's one system that you should try. It only involves simple mathematics and a bit of concentration. This system is one of the oldest. Although it doesn't guarantee a hundred percent, it has a high percentage hit. It is called the 123 workout. Here is how it works:

o You begin by using the preceding numbers drawn from the Pick 3 lottery. Just to provide a concrete example, let us use the numbers 468. We will call it the stack number.

o Important Rule of the 123 workout: Do not carry over when adding or subtracting the numbers. Here is an example: 5 + 9 = 4 (instead of 14)

o The next step is adding +1, +2, +3 to each of the numbers. 1+4=5, 2+6=8, 3+8=1 - First Set of Numbers = 581

o Next is subtracting the -1, -1, -1 still from the stack number. 4-1=3, 6-1=5, 8-1=7 - Second Set of Numbers = 357

o Then we now add +2, +3, +5 to the stack number. 2+4=6, 3+6=9, 5+5=0 - Third Set of Numbers = 690

o List down all the numbers you came up with:
- 581
- 357
- 690

o We can now use the TTT method, otherwise known as the Tic Tac Toe method. It is called as such because it does look like a Tic Tac Toe table. Write the numbers in order on each the cells of the table. This table will now serve as your entire guide for this system unlike other Pick 3 lottery workout systems which would require some automated machine.

Tic

5 8 1
3 5 7
6 9 0

o Identify the following pattern combinations. For the pattern across, here is an illustration.

Across Numbers
5 8 1 581
3 5 7 357
6 9 0 690

Across 581 - 357 - 690
Down 536 - 859 - 170
Diagonal 550 - 651
Diamond 839 - 879
Half Diamond 551 - 650
Corners 358 - 817 - 709 - 963
H Pattern 535 - 635 - 175 - 075
Cross 859 - 357 - 857 - 358 - 359 - 759

o Remove all the doubles and list down the combinations.

- 581
- 357
- 690
- 536
- 859
- 170
- 550
- 651
- 839
- 879
- 551
- 650
- 358
- 817
- 709
- 963
- 535
- 175
- 075
- 857
- 359
- 759

o Monitor all the numbers that come out in the following days. You will realize that one out of the 22 combinations will be the next hit. Let's face it; it is better than having to choose from a million other combinations. Your chance of winning the next lottery is now greater having to choose from a smaller set.

Others have tried other Pick 3 lottery workout systems. Some of them are just too complicated. They would require the work of your personal computer, plus it costs much and takes time to download them. This system only requires a pen and a piece of paper. Try this method and see if the numbers really come out. What have you got to lose?