Basic Rules
The Let It Ride game is a variation of five-card stud, based on three player cards and two community cards. The two community cards are initially dealt face down. The most distinguishing feature of Let It Ride is that the player is given two opportunities to withdraw exactly one-third of their initial wager. One chance occurs after the player looks at their hand but before the first community card is revealed, and the second occurs after the first community card is revealed, but before the second is revealed. The player may reduce their wager on either of these occasions, or on both, or neither. If the player decides not to withdraw part of their wager, they are said to "let it ride".
In the event of a winning hand after the second community card is revealed, what remains of the player's wager is paid out according to a payout table such as the one given below. There are small variations in payoffs between casinos, but the lowest paying hand in Let It Ride is typically a pair of 10s; a pair of nines or less is a losing hand, which results in the player forfeiting their remaining wager to the house.
Hand | Payout |
---|---|
Royal flush | 1,000 to 1 |
Straight flush | 200 to 1 |
Four of a kind | 50 to 1 |
Full house | 11 to 1 |
Flush | 8 to 1 |
Straight | 5 to 1 |
Three of a kind | 3 to 1 |
Two pair | 2 to 1 |
Pair of 10s or better | 1 to 1 |
Read more about this topic: Let It Ride (card Game)
Famous quotes containing the words basic and/or rules:
“Theres a basic rule which runs through all kinds of music, kind of an unwritten rule. I dont know what it is. But Ive got it.”
—Ron Wood (b. 1947)
“Unfortunately, we cannot rely solely on employers seeing that it is in their self-interest to change the workplace. Since the benefits of family-friendly policies are long-term, they may not be immediately visible or quantifiable; companies tend to look for success in the bottom line. On a deeper level, we are asking those in power to change the rules by which they themselves succeeded and with which they identify.”
—Anne C. Weisberg (20th century)