To play poker, each player is dealt cards and bets over several rounds that their hand ranks highest. You either win by having the best five-card hand at the showdown, or by betting enough that everyone else folds. Learn the hand rankings, the betting actions of check, call, raise and fold, and you can play almost any variant.
Poker is not one game but a whole family of card games built on the same simple engine: make the best five-card hand, or convince everyone else you have it. Once you know how the hands rank and how a betting round works, you can sit down at Texas Hold’em, Omaha or a casino table game and follow the action. This guide walks Canadian beginners through the rules step by step, then points you to deeper guides on hands, odds, variants and strategy across our full casino guides library.
- One core idea. Every poker game rewards the best five-card hand, ranked the same way across nearly all variants.
- Four actions. On your turn you can check, call, raise or fold. That is the whole grammar of betting.
- Skill plus chance. Cards are random, but betting decisions over time are where skill decides winners.
- Start with Hold’em. Texas Hold’em is the easiest modern variant to learn and the most widely available online.
What is poker?
Poker is a family of card games in which players bet over one or more rounds on who holds the strongest hand. It is played worldwide, usually with a standard 52-card deck, and while the deal and the number of shared cards change from one variant to another, every version runs on rounds of betting and a shared ranking of hands. That common core is why learning one game teaches you most of the next.
The goal of a hand is simple: win the pot, the pile of chips in the middle. You can do that two ways. Either you reach the showdown with the best five-card hand, or you bet aggressively enough that every other player folds before the showdown, in which case you win without showing your cards. Because of that second route, poker is as much about betting and reading opponents as it is about the cards you are dealt.
Poker hand rankings
Before you play a single hand, you need to know how hands rank, because that order is the backbone of almost every poker variant. A poker hand is made of five cards, and hands are ranked by how unlikely they are: the rarer the combination, the stronger it beats. From strongest to weakest, the standard ranking runs as follows.
| Hand | What it is | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Royal flush | A, K, Q, J, 10, all one suit | A♥ K♥ Q♥ J♥ 10♥ |
| Straight flush | Five in sequence, all one suit | 9♠ 8♠ 7♠ 6♠ 5♠ |
| Four of a kind | Four cards of the same rank | Q Q Q Q 3 |
| Full house | Three of a kind plus a pair | K K K 8 8 |
| Flush | Five of one suit, not in sequence | A♣ J♣ 8♣ 5♣ 2♣ |
| Straight | Five in sequence, mixed suits | 7♥ 6♠ 5♣ 4♦ 3♥ |
| Three of a kind | Three cards of the same rank | 9 9 9 K 4 |
| Two pair | Two pairs of different ranks | J J 6 6 A |
| One pair | Two cards of the same rank | 10 10 K 7 3 |
| High card | None of the above; highest card plays | A Q 9 5 2 |
Two quick rules settle most confusion. A flush beats a straight, because a flush is rarer, and a full house beats both. When two players hold the same type of hand, the higher cards win, so a pair of aces beats a pair of kings. For the full detail, including how ties break and how the odds of each hand stack up, read our cornerstone guide to poker hand rankings.
How a betting round works
Betting is what turns a card draw into poker. On your turn, you always have a small set of choices, and understanding them is enough to follow any game. Most modern poker begins with a forced bet, called a blind or ante, to seed the pot, then the action moves clockwise around the table.
- Check. Pass the action along without betting, only allowed if no one has bet before you in that round.
- Bet or raise. Put chips in. A bet opens the wagering; a raise increases an existing bet and forces others to match it or fold.
- Call. Match the current bet to stay in the hand.
- Fold. Give up your cards and any chips already committed, ending your involvement in that hand.
A betting round ends when every remaining player has either matched the largest bet or folded. Depending on the variant there may be several such rounds, with more cards revealed between them. If everyone folds to a single player, that player wins the pot immediately. If more than one player is left after the final round, the hands are shown and the best one wins in the showdown.
How to play a hand of Texas Hold’em
The quickest way to learn poker is to play the most popular version, Texas Hold’em, where each player combines two private cards with five shared community cards to make their best five-card hand. Here is a single hand from start to finish.
- Post the blinds. The two players left of the dealer put in the small and big blind, the forced bets that start the pot.
- Receive your hole cards. Everyone is dealt two private cards face down. A first round of betting follows.
- See the flop. Three community cards are dealt face up in the middle. Another betting round takes place.
- See the turn. A fourth community card is dealt, followed by a third betting round.
- See the river. The fifth and final community card is dealt, and the last betting round happens.
- Showdown. Remaining players reveal their hands. The best five-card hand, made from any mix of hole and community cards, wins the pot.
That structure, two cards plus a shared board across four betting rounds, is worth memorising because it underlies the whole modern game. Our dedicated guide to Texas Hold’em rules covers position, blinds and betting limits in full.
Which poker game suits you?
Poker has dozens of variants, and the right one for you depends on how you like to play. Answer three quick questions and we will point you to a game and the guide that goes with it.
The main types of poker
Poker variants fall into a few broad families, grouped by how the cards are dealt. You do not need to master all of them, but knowing the map helps you pick where to start and understand what you see in a casino or online lobby.
- Community card poker. Players share face-up cards in the middle. Texas Hold’em and Omaha are the headline games here, and the most popular way to play today.
- Stud poker. Players get their own mix of face-up and face-down cards over several rounds, with no shared board. Seven-card stud is the classic.
- Draw poker. Each player holds a complete hidden hand and can swap cards to improve it. Five-card draw is the traditional home game.
- Casino table poker. House-banked games like Caribbean Stud and Three Card Poker, where you play against the dealer rather than other players.
For a fuller tour of the games, how they differ and which suits a beginner, see our guide to the types of poker, and for the community-card giant, our Omaha poker guide.
Is poker skill or luck?
Poker is a game of skill played with random cards. In any single hand luck dominates, but across many hands the better decision-maker comes out ahead, which is why the same players reach final tables year after year. The skill lives in the betting: knowing when your hand is worth the price, when to fold, and when to apply pressure.
Two ideas do most of the heavy lifting. The first is the maths of the game, the odds and pot odds that tell you whether a call is profitable in the long run. The second is deception, chiefly the bluff, where you bet a weak hand to fold out a stronger one. You can go deep on both in our guides to poker odds and pot odds and the art of poker bluffing.
Managing tilt and mindset
Tilt is the poker word for letting emotion, usually frustration after a bad beat, push you into bad decisions. It is one of the biggest leaks for new and experienced players alike, because the cards will swing against you no matter how well you play, and chasing losses only deepens them. Recognising when you are tilting and stepping away is a genuine skill.
The fix is not complicated, just disciplined. Set a stop-loss before you sit down, take breaks between sessions, and judge yourself on decisions rather than results, since a good fold can still lose and a reckless call can still win. Sound bankroll management is the practical backbone of emotional control: play stakes you can afford to lose and no single session can rattle you.
Can you play poker professionally?
Some people do earn a living from poker, but far fewer than the televised tournaments suggest, and it is a demanding way to make money rather than a shortcut. A professional needs a large bankroll to survive the inevitable losing stretches, the discipline to grind long hours, and a genuine mathematical edge over the players they face. Variance means even strong players endure months in the red.
For almost everyone, poker is best treated as a hobby that can be played skilfully, not a career plan. If you want to improve, focus first on the fundamentals in this guide, then the odds and hand-reading in our deeper guides, and always play within a budget. Treating it as entertainment first keeps the game enjoyable and your finances safe.
Playing poker online in Canada
Online is the easiest place for Canadian beginners to start, with low-stakes tables, play-money games to practise on, and live dealer rooms that bring the feel of a real table to your screen. Look for a licensed, vetted operator, start at stakes you are comfortable losing, and use the free games to get the betting rhythm down before risking real money.
