Barney's Poker
This is the famous Barney's Poker game that our Barney family loves to play whenever they get together. The proper name is "Seven card high-low, Roll your own, Bring 'em back."
Here are the Rules for Barney's Poker:
- 1. Deal 3 cards to each player, all face-down.
- 2. Each player selects one card which is turned face-up. The player with the highest card(s) showing has the opportunity to start the betting round -- else he can check or fold.
- 3. Deal another face-down card to each player (4 total cards); then each player selects a card to turn face-up; betting as in step 2.
- 4. Deal another face-down card to each player (5 total cards); then each player selects a card to turn face-up; betting as in step 2.
- 5. Deal another face-down card to each player (6 total cards); then each player selects a card to turn face-up; betting as in step 2.
- 6. Deal the final face-down card to each player (7 total cards). Now each player has 3 face-down cards and 4 face-up cards; betting as in step 2.
- 7. Each player selects the 5 cards which make the best high or low poker hand, and discards the other two. Then he arranges the five poker-hand cards in the order that they are to be revealed to the other players.
- 8. All players turn up one card and there is a betting round as in step 2.
- 9. All players turn up 3 more cards -- one at a time -- and betting rounds as in step 2.
- 10. There is one card remaining face-down. Now each player declares whether he is going for a high hand or a low hand (We always do this by hiding chips in our fists and holding our fists over the table -- no chips for a low hand, one chip for a high hand -- when everyone is ready then all fists are opened and everyone's declaring chips are shown at once).
- 11. One more betting round, as in step 2 (but see House Rule #4). Then the winning hands are shown.
These are the Barney House Rules for this game and most other poker games:
- 1. A player cannot check and raise in the same betting round, unless he has called at least once before raising.
- 2. The lowest hand is Ace-2-3-4-6. (Ace-2-3-4-5 cannot be low, as it is a Straight.)
- 3. Small flushes and small straights count as high hands, but cannot be used as low hands (i.e., you can't go both ways in Barney's Poker).
- 4. If one player goes high (or low) and everyone else goes the other way, then that "odd man" player bets first, and cannot ever raise.
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