Knowing the winning hand in poker is certainly useful, but surely the actual gameplay is worth covering as well? Here is the basic sequence of play for Five Card Draw, the "standard" game of poker.

  • All players place the ante (the minimum bet needed to participate) in the pot (a pool of money) and are dealt five cards face down.

  • Players pick up cards and examine them. The first betting round begins.

  • The player to the left of the dealer plays first. His choices are to:
    • check, do nothing and pass
    • bet, raise the bet by placing an additional amount in the pot
    Play continues clockwise.

  • If no bet has yet been placed (ie. everybody so far has checked), players continue to choose between checking and betting.

  • If a bet has been placed, the player's options are to:
    • call, place the bet in the pot and continue play
    • raise, place the bet and an additional amount in the pot; play continues with the new increased bet
    • fold, stop playing, forfeit the hand and the pot
      (Note: a folded hand does not have to be shown to others)

  • Play continues until a full round has passed without a new bet or raise (ie. the person who made the last bet/raise cannot raise himself).

  • Players discard 0-5 cards at their discretion and draw (take) new ones to replace them.

  • A second round of betting begins, starting from the player to the left of the first bettor.

  • If all players except one fold, the player who doesn't is the winner.

  • Otherwise, the remaining players show their hands, and highest hand wins.

  • Winner takes the pot. If there is no designated dealer, the player to the left of the dealer is the new dealer.
These are skeletal rules, usable for playing at home but not at the casino -- not that most casinos do Five Card Draw anyway. The industrial-strength rules for minimum/maximum antes, blinds, bets and raises, in particular, are complex and varied. See the rec.gambling.poker FAQ for much more detail and references, and Nekojin's poker terms for more terminology.