Poker is a card game in which players place bets using chips. There are multiple rounds of betting and the player with the highest hand wins. Each round begins with 2 mandatory bets (called blinds) placed into the pot by players to the left of the dealer. The players then choose to call the bet, raise it or drop (fold). If a player calls, they must put the same number of chips into the pot as the player before them or higher. If they raise the bet, they must put in more than the player before them or else “raise.”
The cards are then shuffled and cut, and dealt one at a time to each player. There is another betting interval, and then the flop is revealed. There is another betting round, and the player with the best five-card poker hand wins. Some games also allow for replacement of the original cards with new ones from an undealt portion of the deck.
It’s important to play the situation, not your cards. Your hand is usually good or bad only in relation to what your opponents have. For example, your kings may be strong, but if the opponent holds AK-AK, your kings will lose 82% of the time. This is why deception is such a big part of the game. This includes playing a balanced style of good hands and bluffing when appropriate. It also means being careful about your physical tells, the unconscious habits you have that reveal information about your hand to your opponents.