
Want to broaden your poker experience and try your hands at the fantastic
game of Omaha?
Through this guide you will comprehend the main differences in game
play and the considerations needed to convert your skill in Texas Hold’em
into a reasonable understanding of Omaha. For a description of the concept of hi/lo,
please Rules.
Note: This guide is not an extensive Omaha rule guide and does require
the reader to have a fundamental understanding of communal card poker
games such as Hold'em in order to make sense. With that said it's also
true, and that’s what makes Omaha so fascinating, that the skills
and talents needed to succeed playing Hold'em is not necessarily the
same needed to excel in Omaha!
In Omaha players are dealt four hole cards instead of just two. This drastically increases the number of possible starting hands, and also requires a player to do a more in-depth analysis of each starting hand’s strengths and weaknesses.
The next big difference between Hold'em and Omaha is the two-hole cards
restriction that constitutes that even though you have four pocket
cards, two, and only two, must always be “in play”.
You cannot for example “play the board” as such a hand
would NOT contain two of your hole cards. Neither can you use two
communal spades and add three spade cards from your hole cards to
complete a flush, as that would also break the rule – three
cards being more than two.
IN OMAHA TWO – NO MORE NO LESS – OF YOUR 4 HOLE CARDS
MUST ALWAYS BE IN PLAY.
Which cards you use often changes throughout the hand.
And this is what makes Omaha so exciting and also explains why it
is to a greater degree than Hold'em is a game of mathematics. There’s
(almost) no end to the possibilities!
Omaha is a game well-suited for the pot limit structure. And most
players believe it works far better than
playing the game in no limit format. So in order to learn Omaha properly
one must grasp the basics of pot limit.
In pot limit the maximum a player can bet at any given time is an
amount equivalent to the current pot size. So the larger the pot gets
the higher the maximum bet is! This makes for some very interesting game play.
How to actually calculate the size of a “pot bet” is something
you will pick up along the way, but this is the basic formula. Don’t
let it confuse you.
Amount in pot from earlier betting rounds + 3 x the last bet made
THIS round + all other bets this round = Pot bet.
Example: We are in the middle of the turn betting round. After the
flop there was $100 in the pot.
Player A bets $10, Player B raises to $30, player C’s maximum
pot bet is now: $100 + 3 * $30 + 10 = $200!
With more hole cards in play the chance of someone hitting a really
massive hand obviously increases.
And this fact must be taken into consideration.
A flush in Hold'em is a relatively strong hand as the chance of someone
having a better one is slim. But in Omaha this is much more frequent.
Having the “nuts” (best possible combination) thus becomes
much more vital. Having semi-nuts (for example a king high flush)
can many times turn out to be very, very costly.
