Liar's Poker Game

  1. 17 Poker Liar Game
  2. Liar's Poker Card Game

Snake Eyes Variant. Liar’s Poker is the culmination of those heady, frenzied years—a behind-the-scenes look at a unique and turbulent time in American business. From the frat-boy camaraderie of the forty-first-floor trading room to the killer instinct that made ambitious young men gamble everything on a high-stakes game of bluffing and deception, here is Michael Lewis’s knowing and hilarious insider’s account of an unprecedented. An implementation of a dice bluffing game, similar to Liar's Dice. A player, the 'Declarer' rolls the dice and announces what poker hand is under the cup. The player to the left, the 'Caller', announces whether he or she believes the Declarer. If the Caller believes the Declarer then the Caller takes the cups and is the new declarer, and must declare a higher poker hand from the dice under the. Liar’s dice poker, or lying, is one of the most famous dice poker games that exist in Spain. It is inspired by the English deck of cards, with the main cards -or the most valuable cards in poker. Liar's Poker is a game of bluffing, timing, and truth-finding where players must call successively higher and high poker hands from a pool of cards where their knowledge of the pool is their hand.

  1. This game bears little resemblance to traditional poker, although it does share some strategic elements, like probability and bluffing, as well as a touch of psychology.
  2. A book by Michael Lewis named after the game, published in 1989 about bond traders on Wall Street.

How to Play

Two or more players place bids using the serial numbers from dollar bills (preferably hundred dollar bills) as values. The game is played where the numeral 1 is high or an 'ace' and 2 is low.

Sample Hand

Player 1 opens with three 3s, player 2 counters with three aces. Player 1 counters by bidding four 3s. Now, player 2 may choose to outbid his opponent (by going with something like five 3s or four 4s) or he may 'challenge' the player, believing there to be fewer than four 3s between the two bills combined. If there are four or more 3s between the two competing bills, the challenger loses.

Posted on 2017-02-10 Comments (0)

17 Poker Liar Game

Liar’s Poker recasts the bluffing spirit of the game of poker into an I Doubt It-style affair, doing away with the gambling aspect altogether. That makes it an excellent game for younger players, or to familiarize new players with the poker hands. It can be played with two to eight players, but is best with three to five.

Object of Liar’s Poker

The object of Liar’s Poker is to successfully determine whether the active player in fact has the hand they claim to have.

Setup

Liar’s Poker is played with a 54-card deck of playing cards, formed by adding two jokers to a standard 52-card deck. We’d be lying if we said we didn’t wish you’d use Denexa 100% Plastic Playing Cards in your game. You’ll also need something to keep score with. Pencil and paper is fine, but it’s much simpler to use a supply of markers, such as poker chips.

Select the first active player by any convenient means, such as mutual agreement or high-card draw. Shuffle and deal five cards to that player only. The rest of the deck becomes the stock.

Game play

Poker

The first player looks at the five-card hand they have dealt. They then declare any standard poker hand that they assert the hand contains (jokers act as wild cards). They may simply declare the hand type that they purport to hold (e.g. “a pair”), or they may declare more specifics, such as “a pair of 10s”, “a pair of 10s with an ace kicker”, etc. The player to the left of the active player must decide whether or not they believe the declaration. If they do, they accept the hand, and the cards pass to that player.

Liars poker bill

The new active player then looks at the cards. They don’t reveal whether or not the declaration was true or not. Instead, they may discard up to four cards, face down, and draw new ones to bring the hand back up to five cards. They must then make a declaration higher than that of their predecessor. This may be a wholesale improvement in the hand (e.g. going from “a pair” to “two pair” or “a pair of 5s” to “a pair of 9s”) or it may disclose more information than the previous one. For example, if the previous player declared “a pair of jacks”, then “a pair of jacks with a queen kicker”, “a pair of jacks with a 7”, etc. would qualify as a higher declaration.

If a player doesn’t believe a declaration that has been presented to them, they call “Liar!” If the declaration was honest, then the active player reveals just as many cards needed to prove the declaration correct, and the doubter is given one point. Otherwise, the cards are discarded, face down, and the liar gets one point. In either case, the cards are shuffled. The player that scored the point is dealt a new hand and becomes the new active player.

Game play continues until one player reaches a predetermined number of points. The player with the lowest score at that point is the winner.

Liar's Poker Card Game

Posted in Game Rules Tags: card games, liar's poker, poker