Dq 11 Casino Poker Cards

A poker pro is willing to risk being kicked out of the most prestigious poker tournament in the world in order to promote her new book.

  1. Free Casino Poker Card Games
  2. 4 Card Poker Casino Game
  3. Dq Xi Casino
  4. Casino 3 Card Poker Strategy

An upcoming book entitled Black Widow Poker features the experiences of a West Coast poker player with the pen name Sia Layta. She plans to head to the upcoming World Series of Poker in Las Vegas this summer to play publicly during the book launch. Layta said she will enter July’s $10,000 buy-in main event and play disguised as a man. The book was written to explore the “gender bias” in the poker world that she says keeps women from playing the game.

DQ XI: How do you unlock the red poker table at the casino? DQ XI: How do you unlock the red poker table at the casino? The poker dealer says i'm too young and should be wiser. What is the condition to unlock the 100 toker poker table? Save hide report. Play Texas Holdem poker like a pro with this set of 300 11.5 gram dice striped poker chips with dealer buttons, 2 cut cards and 2 decks of paper playing cards. Perfect for home games, casino parties, and can be used for all games like poker, blackjack, roulette, or other casino table games. DQ.com provides a restaurant locator, menus with nutritional information, franchise details, company history and news. Dairy Queen is an international franchise.

Free Casino Poker Card Games

Layta said women in poker encounter bullying, sometimes arising to the level where it makes it so “women aren’t able to play poker the way men are.” She also cited a strategy example, saying that most women are better off slow playing their hands in order to get action from men. “It’s really hard to win a tournament when you have to limp in,” she said. Her book is also part strategy guide.

A woman has never won the WSOP main event, a tournament that has been running for more than 40 years. Only one woman, Barbara Enright in 1995, has made the final table. Just 272 out of the 6,949 players (four percent) in last year’s main event were women.

Layta, who has played poker for more than a decade, told Card Player in an interview that she plans to remove her disguise, which will include fake facial hair and take about 30 minutes to assemble before sitting at the table, should she make it far enough to at least get her money back. She declined to give her real name. Still, her plans likely will run afoul of the rule book at poker’s richest tournament festival. It could prove costly.

Back in 2008, poker pro Phil Laak played day 1 of the tournament, which runs for over a week at the Rio hotel and casino, with a latex mask on in order to disguise himself as an older man. The costume ultimately wasn’t very convincing and people soon knew it was Laak, but the incident raised eyebrows and led to a rule in order to protect the integrity of the event.

The WSOP carries the rule to this day.

“Participants may not cover or conceal their facial identity,” reads the WSOP rule. “Tournament officials must be able to distinguish the identity of each participant at all times and may instruct participants to remove any material that inhibits their identification or is a distraction to other participants or tournament officials. Participants may wear sunglasses and sweat shirts with hoods, but may be asked to remove them if tournament officials cannot identify them.”

According to WSOP spokesperson Seth Palansky, anyone trying to disguise their identity in the tournament could be disqualified and forfeit their $10,000 entry fee. “My advice is that she take her idea to another event without that rule,” Palansky said of Layta’s plan.

Despite the risk involved if caught, Layta has no plans to scrap the idea.

“We’ve investigated this and [the rule] seems to apply to players trying to put a ‘pro’ in their seat — or some other fraudulent move,” a spokesperson for her book launch told Card Player. “In Sia’s case, she will be playing as herself, but the table will only know her (visually) as a man. There are also many new considerations now that people ‘in transition’ have become common. In any case, she will go forward with playing.”

The stakes are high, especially considering Layta wants to make the final table and improve how women are viewed at the card table. An ejection from the tournament would mean she misses out on a chance to win a first-place prize that will likely be north of $8 million. Her book recounts experiences she’s already had playing “dozens” of poker tournaments across the country disguised as a man.

Layta hopes that her book, but more broadly a changing culture in America regarding gender equality, will help women find more equal footing in the industry. She thinks that eventually “women are going to start flowing to poker.”

Related Articles
Robert Woolley

Ed. note: For those who might have missed it before, we're reprising Robert Woolley's series of articles for poker players who are new to live poker. The series is great for newcomers, and likely useful as well to those with experience playing in casinos and poker rooms.

* * * * *

In these last several 'Casino Poker for Beginners' articles, I've spilled all I know about poker chips and about the different kinds of buttons that show up on casino poker tables. Now it's time to discuss another piece of indispensable poker equipment — the cards.

I know what you're thinking: What can there possibly be to know about cards? 52 of 'em, right? Four suits of 13 each, and the ace of spades the prettiest card in the deck.

Well, yeah. But there's more — much more.

Poker Cards — Built to Bend

Let me start with one prominent feature of casino poker cards that differs from those typically used in home games. Most decks of cards are made of paper, often coated with a thin layer of plastic. But those used in poker rooms are of much higher quality, and they are also much more expensive. They are made of plastic.

In this regard, poker cards differ even from those used in other areas of the casino, such as at the blackjack tables. Cards there are cheap, meant to be used once, or perhaps a few times, then disposed of. But poker cards are meant to be used and reused as long as possible.

The reason for this difference lies primarily in the fact that players surreptitiously marking cards to gain an advantage is a constant problem in blackjack, and the easiest way to combat that is to replace the decks at such a high rate that a cheating player can't keep up.

4 Card Poker Casino Game

But marking cards is generally much less of a problem in poker rooms, so the economics favor investing in durable cards that can be kept in play for months before needing to be replaced.

I'm explaining this because there is an important practical consequence that is not immediately obvious. The plastic poker room cards can be bent almost unmercifully, and still spring back to their original shape without suffering a crease. And that fact matters because it allows you to look at your cards in a way that would be problematic if they were made of paper.

Protect Your Hand from Prying Eyes

It is obviously important that your opponents not see your hole cards. If they do, they can play perfectly against you, and you are at their mercy.

But if you're using paper-based cards that crease easily when bent too far, you're pretty much forced to lift them off of the table in order to see what you have without damaging the cards.

In your home game, you may be able to trust your friends not to sneak peeks at your cards when you do this. But if you lift them completely off of the table in a casino, I can absolutely guarantee that it will cost you money, because the strangers sitting next to you can't be relied on to observe your home-game code of honor.

This doesn't mean that every opponent will look every time. But it only takes one other player seeing what you're holding one time in order for you to lose all the money you have on the table.

You probably learned the basic concept of 'defensive driving' at some point in your life: assume the worst of everybody who shares the road with you. With this mindset, you think ahead to what you'll do if the car in front of you suddenly brakes for a squirrel, or the one approaching the intersection from the right doesn't see his red light, or that semi passing you pulls back into your lane before he's fully clear.

You have to approach casino poker with the same kind of cynicism. While you're being friendly and keeping the game fun for everybody, you need to remember that poker is war, and the other players are the enemy. They want to take your money, and some of them will take ethical shortcuts to do so. Your job is to thwart them on all fronts.

Please remember this simple precept: Never lift your cards off of the table. Nothing good can come from it, and lots of bad things can happen.

Have you ever heard a person described as one who keeps his cards 'close to the vest'? It means somebody who doesn't readily share his thoughts and plans. The expression derives from poker.

When cards were made of paper, without the benefit of even a thin coating of plastic, they were fragile, and couldn't tolerate much bending at all. That meant players had to lift them off of the table, giving others an opportunity to peek.

There's a famous shot of Paul Newman in The Sting playing high-stakes poker on a train — if you've seen it, you'll remember it — where he becomes the literal embodiment of this phrase, with his cards held right against his vest as he carefully looks down at them.

Your Peeking Technique

You can peek at your cards by lifting just one corner. I've seen lots of different techniques for doing this. The photo up top shows the one that has become habitual for me.

Notice how the cards are angled so that the corner with the identifying information is pointed at me. Both hands are cupped around this corner. I lift the corner with my right thumb. If I need to separate the two cards a little bit in order to see both of them, a small pinching movement between my right thumb and index finger does the job without breaking the visual 'seal' of my hands.

Dq Xi Casino

With this method, any other player inclined to try to peek at my cards while I'm looking at them would have to crawl into my lap to do so.

And here (finally) is where it pays off to understand the literal plasticity of the cards — you can bend that corner back as far as you need to without worrying that you'll crease it and ruin the card. Of course, you can crease them if you really try, but it won't happen inadvertently. Take advantage of this fact. Bend that corner to identify your cards without making them vulnerable to snoops by lifting them off of the table.

Casino

There's much more to know about poker room cards, and I'm out of space. More about cards in my next article.

Casino 3 Card Poker Strategy

Photo: Nina Tovish. Robert Woolley lives in Asheville, NC. He spent several years in Las Vegas and chronicled his life in poker on the 'Poker Grump' blog.

Everybody needs an account at one of these online poker rooms! They're the biggest, the best, and we get you the best poker bonuses. Check out our online poker section for details on all the online poker rooms around.

  • Tags

    cash game strategylive casino pokerbeginner strategyrulesetiquettecardslive poker