Poker is a game of incomplete information, and every action you take — fold, call, check, raise, even the way you go about your actions — gives away bits of information to your opponents. They use these bits to build stories about your strength and weakness. Those stories are then used to make decisions about betting and whether to play your hand or call your opponent’s bluff.
Each player starts with two cards. Then five community cards are revealed on the table in a betting round called the flop. Players can choose to fold (exit the hand), call, or raise the amount they bet by saying “call” or “raise” after the previous player’s bet. When a player raises, they must pay the amount they raised into the pot.
Players can then form a five card poker hand by matching or combining their own two cards with the community cards to make a winning combination of ranks and suits. There are many possible hands, but the most common are straight, full house, and flush. Straight consists of 5 consecutive cards of the same rank in one suit. A full house consists of 3 matching cards of the same rank, and a flush consists of any 5 consecutive cards of different suits.
The highest hand wins the pot, or the total amount of money bet in the hand. But you must weigh your odds against your opponent’s, because a good starting hand is not necessarily enough to win in a full house or higher. Having a strong bluff is key, as well.