Omaha Hi/Lo is played with an ‘8-or-better’ qualifier, which means that a low hand must consist of five different cards 🤶 - ranked eight or below - to be eligible to win the low portion of the pot. Low hands in 🤶 Omaha Hi/Lo are determined in exactly the same way they're determined in 7 Card Stud Hi/Lo. If there is no 🤶 qualifying low hand, the high hand wins the entire pot. Omaha Hi/Lo uses the ‘Ace to Five’ or ‘California’ system 🤶 for ranking low hands. Straights and flushes do not count against a hand, and Aces are always low in reading 🤶 the low hand, so the best possible hand is a "wheel": 5, 4, 3, 2, A. To help understand the 🤶 ranks of low hands, the following sample qualifying low hands (not a complete list) are ranked from least powerful (#1, 🤶 will rarely win the low half of the pot) to most powerful (#10, the nuts):
- A player can bet all 🤶 of the chips he has available. Mixed Omaha Hi/Lo - The game alternates between rounds of Limit and Pot-Limit. The 🤶 blinds are increased when the game switches from Pot-Limit to Limit, to ensure that the stake levels are consistent.
After the 🤶 first round of betting is complete, the ‘flop’ is dealt face-up on the board. The flop is the first three 🤶 community cards available to all active players. Betting begins with the active player immediately clockwise from the button. Another round 🤶 of betting ensues. In Limit Omaha Hi/Lo, all bets and raises on the flop are in increments of the small 🤶 bet (for example,R$2 in aR$2/$4 game).
Maximum raise: The size of the pot, which is defined as the total of the 🤶 active pot, plus all bets on the table, plus the amount the active player must first call before raising.
In Pot 🤶 Limit Omaha Hi/Lo, there is no ‘cap’ on the number of raises allowed.
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