The standard 52-card pack is used.
The goal of each player is to win the pot, which contains all the bets that the players have made in any one deal. A player makes a bet in hopes that they have the best hand, or to give the impression that they do. In most Poker versions, the top combination of five cards is the best hand.
Each player receives one card face down and then one card face up, dealt one at a time in rotation.
After the initial deal, there is a betting interval.
Each active player receives one more face up card with a betting interval after each round of cards dealt until all remaining players have one face down card and four face up cards.
All nines and threes are wild, but when a three is dealt face up, the player who gets it must either match the pot or drop.
If a four is dealt face up, it entitles the recipient to an additional hole card, which the dealer immediately provides, face down.
In the showdown, each player turns up all of their hole cards and the player with the best five card hand wins.
Five of a Kind - This is the highest possible hand and can occur only where at least one card is wild, such as a joker. Examples of five of a kind would be four 10s and a wild card or two queens and three wild cards.
Straight Flush - This is the highest possible hand when only the standard pack is used, and there are no wild cards. A straight flush consists of five cards of the same suit in sequence, such as 10, 9, 8, 7, 6 of hearts.
Four of a Kind - This is the next highest hand. An example is four aces or four 3s.
Full House - This colorful hand is made up of three cards of one rank and two cards of another rank, such as three 8s and two 4s.
Flush - Five cards all of the same suit, but not all in sequence, is a flush. An example is Q, 10, 7, 6, and 2 of clubs.
Straight - Five cards in sequence, but not all of the same suit is a straight. An example is 9♥, 8♣, 7♠, 6♦, 5♥.
Three of a Kind - This combination contains three cards of the same rank, and the other two cards each of a different rank, such as three jacks, a seven, and a four.
Two Pairs - This hand contains a pair of one rank and another pair of a different rank, plus any fifth card of a different rank, such as Q, Q, 7, 7, 4.
One Pair - This frequent combination contains just one pair with the other three cards being of different rank. An example is 10, 10, K, 4, 3.
No Pair - This very common hand contains "nothing." None of the five cards pair up, nor are all five cards of the same suit or consecutive in rank. When more than one player has no pair, the hands are rated by the highest card each hand contains, so that an ace-high hand beats a king-high hand, and so on.