Poker Strategies
After receiving pocket cards, you are immediately faced with a choice: play your cards and either raise or call the blinds, or fold.
After receiving pocket cards, you are immediately faced with a choice: play your cards and either raise or call the blinds, or fold.
During one of my recent gambling lecture demonstrations at the Eastman Kodak convention hall in Rochester, New York, a member of the audience asked me, "Isn't the old rule, 'Never play cards with strangers,' about the best protection one can have against Texas Hold'em Poker cheats?"
"That rule," I replied, "gives the average Online Hold'em Poker player as much protection as a broken umbrella in a rainstorm." The card cheat has had the answer to it for years. Suppose that Harry, the card mechanic, discovers there's a big and neighborly Online Hold'em Poker game every Friday night in the back room at Joe's cigar store. He also learns, for instance, the name of a doctor who is one of the players. Harry simply puts in a phone call and makes an appointment to have a physical checkup. During the examination Harry steers the conversation around to Online Hold'em Poker and manages to get an invite to the game. It's easy; he's done it a good many times before. And when Doc introduces him to the other players as one of his patients, no one thinks of him as a stranger; he's already one of the boys. After several Online Hold'em Poker sessions, Harry, who is no longer a stranger, brings Ed, his confederate, to the game, and that's when they go to work making use of their cheating specialty, be it signaling, cold-decking, stacking, second dealing, bottom dealing, etc.