PDA

View Full Version : Nevada Gaming Commission approves Royal Hold'em poker game for casino play


Rick
05-28-2008, 03:31 PM
LAS VEGAS, Nevada -- (PRESS RELEASE) -- The Nevada Gaming Commission yesterday (May 22) approved Royal Hold'em poker for play in Nevada casinos. The new game, already described as the "world's fastest poker game," is a variation of Texas Hold'em that was created and is being marketed by New Poker, LLC of Las Vegas. The game is available to Nevada casinos immediately.

"This is a very big decision for our company," said Vincent Zaldivar, president of New Poker, "because our business plan is for Royal Hold'em to be our entrée onto casino floors and into poker rooms. It will pave the way for the introduction of our other revolutionary poker games. We are very grateful to the Nevada Gaming Commission for its approval."

Royal Hold'em abides by the basic rules of Texas Hold'em but plays with just 20 cards, 10s through Aces. A Royal Hold'em game seats two to six players and has the same rules and betting rounds as Texas Hold'em. Players play against each other, not the house.

"But with only face cards in the game, hands are obviously higher and just about every player always bets to the flop," said poker pro Scott Fischman. "A lot of hands are won on the last card dealt and a Royal Flush or a bad beat hand can happen with the turn of a card. It's a hot game."

The major appeal to casinos is more betting and less folding, which creates larger pots and a lot of excitement for players on every hand.

All betting is conducted in clockwise order. The small blind bet is posted by the first player to the left of the player with the player button. The big blind bet (double the amount of the small blind) is made by the first player to the left of the small blind seat (i.e. 4/8 with two and four blinds). The dealer button rotates clockwise around the table after the completion of each hand.

There are four rounds of betting in the same manner as Texas Hold'em (pre flop, flop, turn and river). There is one bet and a three-raise maximum per betting round. After the completion of a hand, all players who are still in place their cards face up in front of them and the dealer determines the winner. A player may concede the pot by sliding his or her cards face down to the dealer.

The appeal is fueled by the fact the casino industry is on the verge of a table-game revolution as younger players, weaned on video games, demand more action and veteran players seek more variety.

Although new to the landscape, New Poker is taking the lead in creating, testing and marketing new games that already have great appeal with the video-game set and have traditional players jumping on the action.

In addition to Royal Hold'em, New Poker already has a patent approved for "No River Hold'em," another live table game derived from Texas Hold'em.

No River is played by up to 10 players playing against each other with a standard 52-card deck under the basic rules of Texas Hold'em. But the big difference is that each player is dealt three cards, rather than two, and as the name implies there is no river card dealt. There is a flop and a turn only.

With the addition of the third card on the deal, the potential starting hands expand from 1,326 to 22,100.

All betting is conducted in a clockwise order starting with the first player after the button. The small blind is posted by the first player to the left of the dealer button. The big blind (double the amount of the small blind) is placed by the player to the left of the small blind (i.e. 4/8 with blinds of 2 and 4).

There are three rounds of betting in the same manner as Texas Hold'em with one exception. Since there is no river card, there is no betting on the river. One bet and four raises are allowed per betting round in "limit" No River Hold'em. Unlimited raises are allowed in "no limit" No River Hold'em.

At the completion of a hand, all players still in turn their cards face up in front of them and the dealer determines the winner. A player may concede the pot by sliding his or her cards face down to the dealer.

"Just like Royal Hold'em, there is a lot of strategy involved in playing No River because more players stay in the game, it is fast-paced and there is much more betting," Fischman said



I have played this game before. It takes some getting used to having a straight or flush be a 'marginal' hand ;)

Bruno
05-29-2008, 01:56 PM
Thanks for posting this rick. I had read this release also, and had a few thoughts

1) Royal Holdem = Pinnochle poker

2) No River Holdem = Pineapple w/o a river

3) "just about every player always bets to the flop," said poker pro Scott Fischman.
*Scott Fishman is a paid endorser for this company*

4) I don't see any of these games becoming a big deal any time soon (if ever). Perhapps in some home games, but that is all.....

korkskrew
05-29-2008, 02:01 PM
The no-river game sounds fun, but I hate games where I have to modify the deck. Especially for a home game.

That said, the Royal game sounds fun too. I might try it once at my next game, just to see...

I'm a curious cat...about to lose my chips... :donk:

korkskrew
05-29-2008, 02:03 PM
2) No River Holdem = Pineapple w/o a river
and no discard...

pseudoswede
06-03-2008, 01:55 PM
I played Royal Hold'em on one of the online sites. Unless you flop at least a boat, you might as well fold.

korkskrew
06-03-2008, 02:27 PM
So this No River game is kind of intreguing. It's basically about the flop, because there is never going to be good enough pot odds and probably not good enough implied odds to see the last card.

Big pairs and three of a suit are raising hands (and trips of course). You could call preflop with medium pairs with a big suited card or three connectors. Pretty much everything else is trash.

You're looking to make your hand on the flop. If you started strong and hit a big draw on the flop you might get away with a defensive bet on the flop to prevent raises...but I don't think that's going to work very often. The turn card is almost irrelevent in most situations, unless you have a lot of passive players at the table.

It's almost a super simplified version of seven stud, but without all the drama. *edit* and position is HUGE.

Brent_in_Aurora
07-07-2008, 04:59 PM
I like new games as it develops new angles, which in turn is more skill.

There is another variation with three cards on the flop and then two cards at once for the turn/river combined. You get dealt two cards, just like hold em. You still get all of the cards. I have not played it, so I don't know how it differs.

I imagine that there would still be lots of flop action as your draws are cheaper, though other players may not adjust and would let you draw more cheaply than normal.

My 7 year old daughter likes 7 card draw. I am waiting for that game to catch on. I think that I have it figured out.

tjholdem
11-28-2008, 01:20 PM
this game sounds absolutely stupid. No blufing allowed now...everyone has a starting hand. Why notadd jokers and make them wild???