In this lesson, you will learn Video Poker Strategies for
Jacks
or Better and Bonus VP for the Learn to Play Video Poker program.
Whenever I write about video poker and give payback
percentages,
I use the phrase “with expert play” or “with
expert strategy”
frequently.
Jacks or Better with a 9-6 paytable – meaning
full houses
pay 9-for-1 and flushes 6-for-1, pays 99.5 percent “with expert play.”
A
player who draws to inside straights instead of just
tossing away a hand such as 2-4-5-6-9 of mixed suits won’t get 99.5
percent.
They’re not using expert video poker strategies.
Given all that, there are a couple of important video poker strategies
to
remember:
Video poker is not just one game, and there are not expert video poker
strategies.
Within the video poker family, there are a variety of games
--- Jacks or Better, Deuces Wild, Double Bonus Poker, Double Double
Bonus
Poker, Super Aces and on and on.
These games have their own video poker strategies. Try to
apply expert strategy for one game to another, and you'll often find
yourself
making a play that’s correct in one game, but a mistake in another.
If you ask me the best video poker strategies for a hand such as 2, 8
and
10 of hearts, 9 of diamonds and 6 of spades, I'll have to ask you what
game
you're playing. There is no single expert play for the hand.
Check
out these examples to apply video poker strategies:
9-6
Jacks or
Better: Toss away the entire hand. You'll
average a 1.8-coin return per five coins wagered by chucking it all and
hoping
for a good draw, compared with a 1.73-coin return for the next best
option,
hold the 2, 8 and 10 of hearts and hoping for a long-shot draw to a
flush, with
two pair and three of a kind also possible.
Double Bonus Poker: The enhanced 5-for-1 payback on
straights in Double
Bonus
means we try for inside straight draws that we wouldn't bother with on
other
games.
By holding the 6-8-9-10 of mixed suits, with have a
4-in-47
chance of pulling one of the four 7s to complete a straight. Our
average return
is 2.13 coins per five wagered.
And since flushes pay
7-for-1 in this game, our next best
option is to hold the three hearts, with an average return of 1.82
coins.
9-7
Triple
Double Bonus Poker: Here straights pay only
4-for-1, as in most Jacks or Better-based video poker games, so we
don't go for
the inside straight.
However, the 7-for-1 payoff gives us a
viable play. We'll
get back an average of 1.78 coins per five wagered if we hold the 2, 8
and 10
of hearts, and only 1.7 for tossing the entire hand.
Full-pay
Deuces Wild: The deuce is wild, so here it serves
as a 7 that will complete a straight--- 6-2-8-9-10 brings us the
2-for-1
straight payoff we get in Deuces Wild.
That makes our return
10 coins per five wagered, which
dwarfs the 5.12-coin average return for the next best play, holding the
2 alone
and tossing the other five.
One hand. Four games. Four different expert strategies.
That doesn't even take into account that there are games
within the games.
There's not just one Double
Bonus Poker
paytable.
We
don't often see the version, where full houses pay 10-for-1, flushes
7-for-1 and straights
5-for-1.
We rarely see it either online or in brick and mortar
casinos.
That's a game I
consider a treat. More often, we do see Double Bonus in 8-5-4
versions.
Each of those versions has its own expert
strategy.
The big changes come when we drop from a 7-for-1
payoff on
flushes to 6-for-1, and when we drop from 5-for-1 on straights to
4-for-1, just
because we see partial flushes and straights so often.
Let's try a sample hand in which we're dealt two
deuces,
along with a 3, 4 and 5 of mixed suits.
Double
Bonus, we hold one of the 2s, along with
the 3, 4 and 5.
That brings us an average return of 4.26
coins per five wagered,
compared with 4.13 if we keep the pair of deuces instead.
On
the more common Double Bonus, we make the
same
play. In fact, the margin is a little wider since the drop to a 6-for-1
payoff
on full houses drops our expected return to 4.08 coins when we keep the
2s,
while the average return stays at 4.26 on 2-3-4-5.
But what if we're on a Double Bonus machine where straights
pay only 4-for-1?
I don't recommend playing at that
paytable, but if you play
anyway, keep in mind that the expert strategy changes with the
paytable.
On Double Bonus, the average
return
for keeping the pair of 2s holds up at 4.08 coins, but the average
return for
holding 2-3-4-5 plummets to 3.4 coins.
If we want the most
from the game, we change our play with
the paytable.
You might wonder just how one is supposed to remember all that.
I
know I ask myself that question all the time. And the practical answer
is that
you can't memorize all video poker strategies. There are too many
games, and too many
paytable
variations. Pick out the games you're most likely to play,
and practice.
I
practice on tutorial software programs. You can change the paytables on
the
software --- set them up for the games within the games you find where
you
play.
Because, after all, you'll want the expert video poker strategies
for your
game of choice.
Learn
Video
Poker Strategies is followed by Jacks+ Questions
OR
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Poker Program
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