A King is a King and a 10 is a 10.
The King's value of 10 is used in Blackjack not in Poker. You cannot use a King in place of a 10 for a straight in poker.
In poker, 1 pair of kings beat 1 pair of tens or 1 pair of fours, but if you had 2 ten's and 2 four's in a hand then this would beat the 1 pair of kings, although it is a very weak hand.
No. The pair of kings is only one pair. No matter how low your 2 pair is (for instance fours & fives) it can't be beat by one pair.
Yes.
The pair of queens beat the pair of tens, the nine and the ace are irrelevant. Queens are higher ranked than tens.
The double ace (pair of aces) will win from the double 4 (pair of fours).
Poker is a five-card game. There is no such hand as three pairs.
two pair, one pair, and high card.
Two pair works like this, the higher pair determines who is the winner. Suppose I have two pair Aces and fives, that means I beat all two pair that have kings as the higher pair, and queens etc. So Aces and fives beats Kings and queens. Now, if there is tie then the second pair comes in, so Aces and fives loses to Aces and sevens.
There are no tricks in poker, there is three of a kind or a pair. A three of a kind always beats a pair.
It is 0.0465, approx.
No. 5 6 7 suited is nothing. 5 cards in a sequence in same suit would be a straight flush which is very good. However, 2 kings is a pair.
i think its a pair but i have only recently started playing poker so im not sure
No, they do not. However, it also depends on whether the dealer qualified or not, and whether the player bet on the Pair Plus. On the Pair Plus it does not matter what the hand is, if it is a pair or better, it gets paid. On the ante and play, if the dealer does not qualify it is a push and a pay, when the dealer qualifies then it depends on who had the Kings and who had the Jacks. If you are talking about other players on the table, it does not matter, in Three Card Poker the players play against the dealer and not each other.