1. Longhand Limit
2. Shorthand Limit
3. Adv. Shorthand
No-Limit Hold'em:
1. Intro to NL
2. Advanced NL
3. Who Pays Off
4. Stack Sizes
Omaha:
1. Intro to Omaha
2. Low Limit Omaha
3. Intro to PLO
4. Omaha Hi/Lo
Tournaments:
1. Tourney Overview
2. Single-Table NL
3. Advanced NL STTs
4. Multi-Table NL
5. Multi-Table Limit
6. Tourney Variants
Money Management:
1. Moving Limits
2. When to Quit
3. Short/Long Run
Other:
1. Intermediate Mistakes
2. Utilizing Promotions
In other languages:
Introduction to Omaha
POKER STRATEGY
The RulesIn Omaha, each player recieves 4 hole cards and everyone shares 5 community cards, similar to Texas Hold'em. The catch is that you must use exactly 2 cards from your hand and 3 cards from the board to make your 5-card poker hand. In general the winning hands in Omaha are much better than the winning hands in Texas Hold'em.
When you are first playing Omaha, you should make sure you are actually using 2 cards from your hand, and not 3 or 1.
Please see the Omaha Rules Page for more information.
Why play Omaha?
Omaha is not as popular as Texas Hold'em but the games are there if you look for them. Many good Hold'em players want to try out Omaha and are unfamiliar with the game, but they may still play at high limits because they are good at Hold'em. These players generally play too loose.
Also, Omaha is much more of a technical game because it is easy to see what the best hand is, since usually there is a flush or a straight on board and odds are that somebody has one. By "technical" I don't mean that Omaha is a more complex game. On the contrary, it is much simpler, because it is more a game of straightforward probabilities, whereas the psychological element in Texas Hold'em is much stronger.
Some good places to play low-limit Omaha are Party Poker or Empire Poker (they are on the same network).
Next Article: Low Limit Omaha Strategy
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