Boston 5 Stud Poker
By
Will Veda
Yet even another
poker-based table game has arrived, called Boston 5 Stud
Poker. With
poker’s recent popularity surge, new poker-based casino
games are cropping up everywhere like autumn corn in Iowa.
B5SP is actually two games in one combining Three Card
Poker with Stud Poker (five cards without any draws).
To begin, an Ante
and a First Wager are placed.
The First Wager must be exactly twice the Ante.
And like Three Card Poker, the player has the option to
place a Bonus bet on the first three cards with payouts
similar to 3CP (see table below).
The Bonus bet can be any amount above the stated
minimum; it has nothing to do with the Ante part of the game.
Unlike 3CP, the Bonus bet cannot be made alone.
Each player receives three cards and if they consist of a
pair or better, they must reveal their cards to show the
dealer. This is
where the Three Card Poker segment comes into play with a
payout table that is paid only if the Bonus bet was made:
(3-card)
Straight Flush: 40 to 1
Three of a Kind: 30 to 1
Straight: 6 to 1
Flush (4 sometimes 3) to 1
Pair: 1 to 1
Be sure to reveal any winning hands; I
once observed a Newbie receive a deuce, three, and four of
clubs and he turned them face down.
Luckily, I was behind him and screamed out to the
dealer that he had a Straight Flush.
The player’s face became flush when the pit boss
bestowed him a mulligan.
The player now decides if he wants to
continue or fold, which results in forfeiting the Ante and
First Wager (the Bonus bet has already been decided).
If he feels good enough about combating the dealer’s
hand, he must place a Second Wager, equal to the First Wager.
The players continuing will now receive two more cards.
You are allowed to look at these, but I prefer to play
“mini-blind” and just await the outcome when the dealer
exposes the hand.
One by one, the hands are compared to
the dealer’s and the best five-card poker hand wins.
If the dealer has the stronger hand, the player loses
all three bets (Ante, First Wager and Second Wager).
If the player’s hand is stronger, he wins even money
on the First and Second Wagers and the Ante pushes.
If both the player’s and the dealer’s hands are
exactly equal (not likely to happen, which surprises me that
there isn’t a tie bet available), all three bets push.
Wait, all is not lost.
We now have a Video Poker-like segment where the
strength of the hand can provide a payout no matter if the
hand lost or won. This
is called the Ante (and only the Ante) Bonus payout and uses
the following pay table:
Royal
Flush: 1000 x Ante
Straight Flush: 200 x Ante
Four of a Kind: 100 x Ante
Full House: 25 x Ante
Flush: 15 x Ante
Straight: 10 (sometimes 8) x Ante
Three of a Kind: 5 x Ante
Two Pair: 2 x Ante
Note:
If the player loses the hand to the dealer, but receives an
Ante-eligible payout, he will lose the Ante bet.
For example, a player wages $5 on the Ante and gets
three fives, but the dealer gets a straight.
The player receives only $25 (5 x Ante) after losing
the Ante. If his three of a kind, however, had beaten the dealer’s
hand, he would have received $30 (the bonus payout plus the
Ante).
There is only one strategy: RAISE ON
EVERYTHING. Just
play the game all the way through.
If you fold, you lose two bets right away, but if you
continue, only one more bet is made, win or lose.
It is wiser to take the risk of losing the three bets
as opposed to losing the original two (sans the three card
bonus) and watching the dealer get absolutely nothing that you
could have beaten by continuing.
Boston 5 Stud Poker is a fun and
exciting game to play, but can be very volatile with many
swings going for and against the player.
Keep in mind that receiving a strong poker hand on five
initial cards is very rare. So, be careful.
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