The most difficult part of learning to play Poker is understanding the ranks of hands. That process is dealt with simply by providing newcomers with a list of the relative values. Betting is easy enough to understand, too: when it’s your turn, you match the previous bid (if there is one) or increase the bid. It’s not Go Fish or 52-Card Pick-up, but Poker is easily learned in only a few minutes.
Challenge
Learning to play it well, however, is another story. In poker, you learn quickly that even though you understand the rules, there are still volumes of information about the game that you have yet to learn! To play well, you need to develop a number of skills that challenge you to amass the fullest strength of your powers of concentration. Slip up at all and you’ll lose to somebody else that’s paying better attention to details.
It surprises people to learn that poker is very much a game of skill. Things like understanding probability, remembering what cards have been played, discovering the other player’s betting styles and being careful not to keep your own playing style a secret can certainly keep you on your toes!
For me, the allure of poker is that in the end, the actual value of your hand doesn’t matter. If you aren’t playing well, you could win $10 with four aces, and lose $1000 in the next round to somebody that only has a pair of kings!
Luck
But what would poker be without the element of luck? I would argue that luck is that part of the game that keeps people coming back to it. Luck gives a weaker player the hope that he can still win, while at the same time keeping even the most experienced players humbled.
To understand the importance of luck, consider chess. Chess involves no luck whatsoever (unless you count those times when your opponent doesn’t recognize that he can checkmate you in two moves). Assuming that both players know the rules of chess, it becomes only a game of strategy versus strategy. If you are playing a significantly better player, you have no chance of winning. And if you’ve played a significantly better player, you will know what I mean!
With poker, however, it’s quite easy to have a scenario where a clumsy player has been playing recklessly throughout the game. A better player then gets it in his head to teach the careless player a lesson and ropes him into betting more and more until finally he’s “all-in”. But when the cards are turned over, the reckless player takes it all!
The Perfect Mix
So, there you have it. Poker is the perfect card game because it’s a perfect blending of simplicity, challenge and luck. And most importantly, you don’t even need to risk any real money to enjoy the game (you do, however, have to really want to win).
It certainly can be about the money. While I was adrift between my first job out of college and the next job I found, I kept my household running playing internet poker (my net winnings matching my monthly net income). Obviously when I attained a new job I stopped doing this and it became a fun pastime again.
It is sad, however, that since the feds couldn’t figure out how to get tax money from offshore servers, they banned real money for US users over the internet under the guise that gambling is bad for people. Please, Congress, tell that to the casinos you are reaping tax money or some other kickback from.
Thanks Brody. You’re right. A more accurate title would have been “It’s not just about the money” 🙂
In fact, I’ve actually heard of other people who played poker to (successfully) get through tough financial times.