High card by suit and
Low card by
suit refer to assigning relative values to
playing cards of equal rank based on their
suit.
Most
poker games do not rank suits; the ace of
spades is just as good as the ace of clubs. However, small issues
(such as deciding who deals first) are sometimes resolved by
dealing one card to each player. If two players draw cards of the
same rank, one way to break the tie is to use an arbitrary
hierarchy of suits.
No standard ranking of suits exists for all poker games. Even
within a particular poker variant, the order of suits differs by
location.
(For example, the ranking most commonly used
in the United
States
is not the one typically used in Italy
.) Two common
conventions are:
- Alternating colors: diamonds (lowest),
followed by clubs, hearts, and
spades (highest). This ranking is also used in the
Chinese card game Big Two or Choi Dai Di.
- Alphabetical order: clubs (lowest), followed
by diamonds, hearts, and
spades (highest). This ranking is also used in the
game of bridge.
Cards are always compared by rank first, and only then by suit. For
example, using the "alphabetical order" ranking, the ace of clubs
ranks higher than any king, but lower than the ace of diamonds.
High card by suit is
never used to break ties between
poker hands, but can be used in
the following situations, as well as various others, based upon the
circumstances of the particular game:
- Randomly selecting a player or players.
- To randomly select a player to deal, to choose the game, to
move to another table, or for other reasons, deal each player one
card and the player with high card by suit is selected. Multiple
players can be selected this way.
- In games such as Seven-card
stud, where the player with the lowest-ranking face-up card is
required to open the first betting round for a minimal amount, ties
can be broken by suit. In such low stud games as razz, the player with the highest-ranking
upcard must post the fractional bet.
- Awarding odd chips in a split pot.
- In High-low split games, or when
two players' hands tie, the pot must be split evenly between them. When there is an
odd amount of money in the pot that can't be split evenly, the odd
low-denomination chip can be given to the player whose hand
contains the high card by suit. (This solution is not necessary in
games with blinds, in which case the
odd chip between high and low is awarded to the high hand, and the
odd chip between a split high or split low is awarded to the first
player following the dealer button.)
- Breaking ties in a chip race
- During poker tournaments, a
chip race is used to "color up" large
numbers of smaller-denomination chips, and a modified deal is used
to assign leftover chips. Ties in the deal are broken by suit.
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