Open Face Chinese Poker Pineapple Rules

We are the most popular Open Face Chinese Poker game on iOS, with tens of thousands of active players, and hundreds of thousands of hands played every month. And no two hands are ever the same. This app supports Regular and Pineapple Open Face Chinese Poker (OFC), and now with Deuce (2-7) Middle Pineapple, with in-app purchase.

  1. Open-face Chinese poker is a new and exciting form of poker. It combines simple rules and the drama of drawing for big hands, as in Texas hold’em and seven-card stud, with the high variance of.
  2. This video explains how to play open face chinese (ofc) on Gambit.com. We specifically discuss the Pineapple variant as it is so popular now.

OFC/P 2-7 is a variant of Pineapple Open Face Chinese. In OFC/P 2-7, the middle 5-card hand is set as a 2-7 lowball hand.

Rules

2-7 Pineapple OFC Poker Gameplay

OFC/P 2-7 can be played by 2 or 3 players. During the course of the hand, players will arrange their hole cards on the layout in rows to make 3 poker hands, arranged in order of ascending rank. These hands are called the top, middle, and bottom:

  • Top hand: A 3-card poker hand, which may only rank as a high card, a pair, or three of a kind. Straights and flushes do not count. It must rank lower than the bottom hand.
  • Middle hand: A 5-card 2-7 lowball poker hand. It must rank Ten-low or better (T-9-8-7-5 or lower; straights and flushes count against the hand).
  • Bottom hand: A standard 5-card poker hand. It must rank the highest of the 3 hands.

An OFC/P 2-7 hand that breaks these rules (by having a top hand stronger than the bottom hand, or a middle hand higher than Ten-low) is a fouled hand and automatically loses.

At the start of a hand, each player is dealt 5 face-down hole cards. Clockwise from the dealer, players in turn set and confirm the positions of these 5 cards on the layout, face-up. Once confirmed, the cards become visible to all players and cannot be changed or moved.

For the rest of the hand, each player is dealt 3 face-down cards at once in turn, and must place 2 of the cards into available positions on the layout while discarding the third.

Once positioning is confirmed, the cards become visible to all players and cannot be changed or moved to a different row.

The remaining cards are dealt in this manner, three at a time, until all players have completed their layouts of 13 cards. Hands are then compared and scored.

Scoring

At showdown, players hands are compared and points are exchanged based on hand strength.

Two players’ individual hands are first compared to each other for scoring, row to row (top against top, middle against middle, and bottom against bottom), with the better hand winning each comparison.

  • 1 point is awarded to the winner of each of the three hands.
  • 3 bonus points are awarded if a player wins all three hands.

Additional bonus points called royalties are then awarded for certain strong hands:

Bottom Royalties:

  • Royal Flush: 25 points
  • Straight Flush: 15 points
  • Four of a Kind: 10 points
  • Full House: 6 points
  • Flush: 4 points
  • Straight: 2 points

Middle Royalties:

  • 7-5-4-3-2 perfect: 8 points
  • 7-low: 4 points
  • 8-low: 2 points
  • 9-low: 1 point

Top Royalties:

  • AAA: 22 points
  • KKK: 21 points
  • QQQ: 20 points
  • JJJ: 19 points
  • TTT: 18 points
  • 999: 17 points
  • 888: 16 points
  • 777: 15 points
  • 666: 14 points
  • 555: 13 points
  • 444: 12 points
  • 333: 11 points
  • 222: 10 points
  • AA: 9 points
  • KK: 8 points
  • QQ: 7 points
  • JJ: 6 points
  • TT: 5 points
  • 99: 4 points
  • 88: 3 points
  • 77: 2 points
  • 66: 1 point

The awarded points and royalties for both players are then recorded. If more than 2 players are playing, each remaining exchange is scored until all players have exchanged points with all other players in the hand.

After a round of hands completes, players settle the final total of points won or lost, by exchanging chips with the other players in turn.

Players are not allowed to sit out or leave the table during a round of hands, and must wait until the round is complete.

Fantasyland

The Fantasyland bonus requirement in OFC/P 2-7 is KK+ (a pair of Kings or better as top), or a perfect low (7-5-4-3-2 low as middle). A player enters Fantasyland by making a hand which meets one or both of these requirements and does not foul.

Chinese

The button does not advance during a Fantasyland bonus hand. In the bonus hand, the player in Fantasyland receives 14 or 15 cards face-down at the start of the hand, and sets a complete 13-card hand face-down on the first turn, discarding the extra cards.

  • A pair of Kings or better on top awards a normal 14-card Fantasyland.
  • 7-5-4-3-2 perfect as middle awards a normal 14-card Fantasyland.
  • Both a pair of Kings or better on top and 7-5-4-3-2 perfect as middle awards a 15-card Fantasyland.

All players not in Fantasyland receive 5 starting cards as normal, and must draw and set their hands face-up in turn. The hand is then scored normally.

Pineapple

The middle hand in Fantasyland must continue to be a qualifying lowball hand. For this reason, it is possible (although unlikely) that a player may be forced to foul in Fantasyland.

A player in Fantasyland may repeat Fantasyland and play another bonus hand by making one of the following strong hands while in Fantasyland:

  • Three of a Kind or better (top)
  • Four of a Kind or better (bottom)

Players who repeat Fantasyland will only receive the normal Fantasyland of 14 cards on each repeat.

OFC/P 2-7 is played for table stakes. The amount a player has at the table determines the maximum win or loss possible in one round of bitcoin poker.

Tired of playing the same old poker games? With their new browser-based client, FlopTurnRiver.com (FTR) is offering up an exciting and totally different way to play poker. The game is Open Face Chinese Poker, and it can be played here for free.

The vast majority of you reading this probably just thought out loud, “What the hell is Open Face Chinese Poker?” The game originated in the mid-2000s in Europe and soon spread to Russia; by the turn of the decade Open Face Chinese had caught on in the United States. Since then it has become one of the more popular games among the professional poker crowd. Daniel Negreanu tweeted that “It’s been a while since I’ve been addicted to a card game but I am completely addicted to Open Faced Chinese Poker.”

The game can be played with 2-4 players, and is based on a point system—instead of placing bets on every street, each winning hand is worth a set number of points, the value of which is chosen before the game begins. Some people may play for $1 a point, while higher stakes players may end up playing for $100 a point.

Each player is given 13 cards, which are then organized into three rows: the top hand (3 cards), the middle hand (5 cards), and the bottom hand (5 cards). Similar to regular Chinese poker, the bottom hand must be strongest, the middle hand the second strongest, and the top hand the weakest. Points are then awarded based on the amount of hands won, as well as by collecting royalties on premium hands and avoiding fouls. For a more detailed analysis, you can read this article on the Open Face Chinese Poker rules.

Poker

FTR has created a web browser-based client that is available on both PCs and Macs, and, because it’s run through a browser, it is also mobile friendly, meaning you can play it on your iPhone, iPad, Android, or any other mobile device or smartphone. This also means that the game suffers no slowdown when played on a mobile device, which is a definite improvement over other mobile poker clients.

Two different types of Open Face Chinese poker are available to play: regular OFC and POFC (Pineapple Open Face Chinese). The difference between the two is that with POFC, after the first five cards are placed, each player is dealt three cards instead of just one. Players must then choose where to place two of the cards and discard the third.

There are also two types of tables available: Open FTR Tables, which are open to anyone, and Private Tables. Players have the option of choosing from either regular or turbo tables, the difference being the amount of time a player is allowed to have per round (5 minutes on beginner tables and only 2 minutes on turbo tables).

Play Open Face Chinese Poker

Open tables are set up like cash games, where a player can leave any time they want. At the moment, play on the Open FTR Tables is limited to heads up play only, but 3-4 handed tables are expected to become available in the upcoming weeks. If you are interested in playing with multiple people, you can create and customize your own Private Table, adding a personalized password and choosing the amount of time allowed and number of rounds to be played. There are two different card modes, click-card mode, and drag-card mode, which are both pretty self-explanatory.

Free Open Face Chinese Poker

On the Open FTR Tables, you can play for free or you can gamble with FTR Points. Only FTR members can play and earn points, but registering a free account is easy and will instantly earn you 1000 points. Click here for a detailed description on how to earn FTR Points. Similar to other poker programs, players will be able to trade in their FTR Points and purchase FTR clothing and items. In the future, FTRP will also be used as buy-ins for freerolls and real-money tournaments.

On the beginner’s tables, players can also compete against computer opponents (bots). The bots, consisting of Glass Joe and Bald Bill, are relatively easy to beat once you have a decent grasp of the game, and they earn you FTR Points. They are also a wonderful way to learn the ins and outs of OFC, and a great way to win over new players who may feel slightly intimidated by the game’s rules and scoring system.

Open Face Chinese Poker Pineapple Rules 34

Pineapple

Pineapple Open Face Chinese Poker online, free

Speaking of the scoring system, at the end of every hand two buttons appear at the bottom of the screen: “Did I set it right?” and “Did I play it right?” This allows a player to share their hand history on the FTR forums with the rest of the FTR community. It’s yet another great way for players to learn the intricacies of the game.

At the moment, no major online poker company supports OFC, so this is the best opportunity to learn how to play and compete against real players. Because of the novelty of the game, there aren’t a lot of players currently on the tables, and it can often take several minutes to get a heads-up game going. That being said, the client itself is clean and user-friendly, and I didn’t notice any slowdown or glitches. Hopefully, as the number of players increase, tournaments, high stakes tables, and real-money games will be made available. All in all, Open Face Chinese poker is an exciting game, and FTR’s browser-based client is a blast to play.