Big
2 Poker is a game for 2, 3, or 4 players in which each receives
13 cards. The object is to be the first to discard the entire
hand.
The player holding the lowest ranked card starts by discarding
a card set. Each player, in turn, plays a higher card set
or passes. This continues until 3 players pass. The remaining
player then starts a new round with any card set. The game
ends when 1 player runs out of cards.
Passing
doesn't prevent you from playing subsequent rounds in the
same game.
Card sets and their values
Here they are, in descending order:
| 5 |
Straight Flush |
|
| 5 |
4-of-a-Kind + Kicker |
|
| 5 |
Full House |
|
| 5 |
Flush |
|
| 5 |
Straight |
|
| 3 |
3-of-a-Kind |
|
| 2 |
Pair |
|
| 1 |
Single |
|
The ranks and suits are also ordered. In descending
order, the cards are ranked 2 A K Q J 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 (hence
the name, "Big 2".) Again in descending order, suits go   
, making 3
the lowest card. Card rank supersedes suit. When comparing flushes, the ranks of the 5 cards are compared
one by one. If all 5 ranks are identical, the stronger suit
wins.
Let’s say Player A begins by playing 3
by itself.
However many cards a player initiates action with, every
subsequent hand in that round must discard that number of
cards. Had Player A discarded a pair, the remaining players
(and A himself) could only play pairs in that round.
Player B can only follow with another single, say 9 .
Player C is now restricted to singles higher than 9 ,
that is, 9 and
any 10, J, Q, K, A, or 2. If C holds no singles higher than
9 ,
(or, more likely, wishes to hold onto multiple higher cards
for later rounds), she'll pass.
If D and A then pass, B wins the round and can open the
next round with whatever he chooses.
When a player has 1 card left, the previous player (the
assistant) must play the best possible card set to prevent
the next player from winning. The assistant can play a multiple-card
set, or, if that's impossible, play the highest possible
single card.
If the assistant fails to do this, and the next player
wins, the assistant covers everyone's losses and can't take
money from other players.
When 2
is played alone, or as part of a pair or 3-of-a-Kind, all
opponents automatically pass. A player also passes if he/she
holds fewer cards than the number of cards played in the
preceding hand.
Dealer Puck:
Big 2 incorporates a dealer puck to initiate payment at
the end of each game. The player to the immediate right
of the puck is the first to compare his hand with the others',
and so on around the table. Any player low on cash is thus
prevented from gaining or losing more than what he had available
at the start of the game.
| Units/pt. |
25¢ |
50¢ |
$1 |
$2 |
$3 |
$5 |
$8 |
$10 |
$15 |
$20 |
| Buy-in |
$12 |
$25 |
$50 |
$50 |
$112 |
$125 |
$200 |
$250 |
$300 |
$350 |
| Ante |
10¢ |
15¢ |
30¢ |
60¢ |
70¢ |
90¢ |
$1.20 |
$1.80 |
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|