This invention relates to a method for playing video poker wherein a primary five card hand is dealt and a secondary hand may be played from the discarded cards of the primary hand. The remaining cards for each hand are dealt from the remainder of a standard deck of 52 cards.
The following references disclose a video poker game wherein multiple hands are dealt per game for a single player: U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,098,985 (Moody), 6,474,645 (Tarantino), 6,511,068 (Sklansky et al.), 6,561,898 (Moody), 7,247,092 (Jarvis et al.), 7,156,397 (Moody et al.), 6,443,456 (Gajor), U.S. Patent Application Nos. 2003/0038425 (Tarantino), 2004/0219970 (Tarantino), and 2005/0026668 (Tarantino), all incorporated herein by reference.
U.S. Patent Application No. 2006/0287058 (Resnick et al.) discloses a gaming system with multiple game types, and is incorporated herein by reference.
U.S. Patent Application No. 2007/0155500 discloses a multiple player video poker game, and is incorporated herein by reference.
The following references disclose an improved poker game: U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,137,628 (Moody), 7,222,856 (Dodge), 7,222,857 (Moody), 7,222,858 (Moody), U.S. Patent Application 2006/0281513 (Kirkpatrick), all incorporated herein by reference.
The following references disclose a gaming device with a bonus scheme: U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,506,118 (Baerlocher et al.), 6,514,141 (Kaminkow et al.), 7,022,016 (Wood et al.), and 7,247,092 (Jarvis et al.), all incorporated herein by reference.
The following prior art references disclose electronic or computerized gaming devices: U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,042,809 (Richardson), 6,248,016 (Walker et al.), 6,332,839 (Walker et al.), 7,022,016 (Wood et al.), 7,222,857 (Moody), 7,247,091 (Moody), U.S. Design Pat. No. Des. 395,463 (Scott et al.), and U.S. Pat. No. 6,201,532 which discloses an electronic gaming device with a deck mounted touch screen, all incorporated herein by reference.
This invention relates to a multiple handed video poker game wherein a single player is dealt a primary hand of 5 cards face up from a standard 52 card deck after a pre-determined bet is placed, with a pre-determined bet also placed on one or more secondary hands. The cards of the primary hand are arranged in one row, with each secondary hand to be arranged in another row below the primary hand. The player chooses which cards are held in the primary hand and which cards are discarded and moved to one or more secondary hands. Cards are then dealt to complete both the primary hand and each secondary hand.
A winning primary hand wins an amount based on a pre-determined pay scale and is multiplied by one or a win in the secondary hand. Any win in the secondary hand is based on a pre-determined pay scale and displayed on a credit meter.
If the primary hand does not yield a win, then the player loses the wagers on the primary and secondary hands.
Any or all of this game may be played with an actual dealer or with a computerized gaming console with a video screen such as a CRT or a flat screen display such as plasma, LCD, OLED, or LED. The game may be played on site at a legal game casino, in a non-gambling mode on-line over the internet, or off-line on a home computer using a disc such as a compact disc. The game could also be played as a game in gambling or non-gambling mode at a tavern, bar, home, or the like.
The present game can be played with multiple hands and/or with multiple players. The game can also be played on a video game system such as Microsoft Xbox Live, Sony Playstation, or Nintendo Wii.
The gaming console may include a computer with a random number generator, and an integrated touch system to facilitate player input. The touch system may be an infrared (IR) touch system, capacitive touch system, resistive touch system, surface acoustical wave touch system, or an inductive touch system, mounted to the cabinet or to the bezel of the screen. A keyboard, cursor, or other input device may be used.
Once a player places a bet, a hand of 5 cards is dealt.
The player chooses which cards 102a will be held in the primary hand and which cards 102b will be discarded to the secondary hand. In
The primary hand 101 is dealt cards to replace the cards that were discarded. Cards are also dealt to the secondary hand 102 to complete the hand. The primary winnings 103a are displayed in the primary pre-determined pay scale 103. In this example, the player has three of a kind (three deuces), earning the player 15 credits. The winnings 104a in the secondary hand are displayed in the secondary hand pre-determined pay scale 104. In this example, the player has two pairs (queens and sevens), earning the player a multiplier of three. As seen in
Once a player places a bet, a hand of 5 cards is dealt.
The player chooses which cards 202a will be held and which will be discarded 202b. In
The primary hand 201 is dealt cards to replace the cards that were discarded. Cards are also dealt to the secondary hand 202 to complete the hand. The primary winnings 203a are displayed in the primary pre-determined pay scale 203. In this example, the player has a straight, earning the player 20 credits. In this example, the player does not have a winning secondary hand so a multiplier of one is used. As seen in
Once a player places a bet, a hand of 5 cards is dealt to the primary hand.
The player chooses which cards 302a will be held and which will be discarded 302b. In
The primary hand 301 is dealt cards to replace the cards that were discarded. Cards are also dealt to the secondary hand 302 to complete the hand. In this example, the player does not have a winning hand, so zero credits are issued. The winnings in the secondary hand 304a are displayed in the secondary hand pre-determined pay scale 304. In this example, the player has a straight flush and wins 25 credits as the multiplier. As seen in
Once a player places a bet, a hand of 5 cards is dealt.
The player chooses which cards 502a will be held in the primary hand 501 and which cards 502b will be discarded to the secondary hands 502-1 and 502-2. Although two secondary hands are illustrated in
In one embodiment, the player is given the option of creating additional secondary hands by placing a wager or bet on each elected secondary hand up to n hands. In order to accommodate n hands it may be necessary to use multiple decks of cards. The player must have a winning primary hand in order to take advantage of the multiplier from one or more secondary hands. The player must place a bet on the primary hand and at least one secondary hand.
In
As seen in
A conventional payout hopper is also located on the interior of the gaming machine and is used to dispense coins or tokens to the player into a payout tray 56 when the player wishes to collect any winning amounts the player has accrued. Other suitable and conventional payout mechanisms can be used, such as a ticket printer or other cashless payout devices.
The gaming machine 10 also includes a video screen display 20 of any suitable size or type upon which representations of playing cards are displayed. In one embodiment, one or more hands can be displayed on the video screen display 20 at the same time. As illustrated in
A button panel 40 is also provided on the gaming machine 10 with buttons mounted on the button panel 40 to be used by the player to control the operation of the gaming machine 10. Any suitable number or configuration of the buttons on the button panel can be used and, alternatively, conventional touch screen technology can be used for any or all of the buttons mounted on the button panel.
A typical button arrangement is shown on the button panel 40 in
A conventional “DEAL/DRAW” button 46 is also provided on the button panel 40 which is used by the player to activate the initial deal of the cards at the deal stage of the method of play or the dealing of replacement cards at the draw stage of the method of play as is appropriate. Similarly, a DEAL/DRAW location 47 can be provided on the video screen 20 to allow the player to select either the deal step or the draw step by using conventional touch screen technology. The button panel 40 is also provided with five “CARD” buttons 48A, 48B, 48C, 48D and 48E associated with each horizontal card location on the video screen display: card button 48A is associated with the left most card location, card button 48B is associated with the second from the left card location, card button 48C is associated with the middle card location, card button 48D is associated with the second from the right card location and card button 48E is associated with the right most card location. Each card button is preferably aligned below the card locations so that the player can easily associate the appropriate card button with the appropriate card location. The method of play of the various versions of the present invention will now be described. After the player has inserted an appropriate amount of coins, tokens or paper currency to add a sufficient amount of credits on the credit display meter 22, the player makes his initial wager. The player may press the BET ONE button 42 one or more times to bet in single increments or the player may merely press the “BET MAX” button 44 and the maximum number of credits are applied, for example, five credits would be wagered. The player can also use the touch screen locations to make his wager as described above.
To play the poker game, the player establishes a pool of credits, sets the wager, deals the cards, chooses which cards to hold and discard, draws replacement cards, and collects credits for winning card combinations, with enhancements for any bonus card 61 dealt and/or drawn.
In one embodiment, a set of buttons are mounted on the button panel 40 and are used by the player to control the functions of the poker game: Bet One 42, Bet Max 44, Deal/Draw 46, Help 43, Pay Table 45, and Cash Out 41. Any or all of these control buttons may be displayed on the video display 20 and/or buttons electronically connected to the gaming device. If necessary, any number of buttons may be added to further facilitate control of the game, such as Hold buttons to “hold” the cards shown on the video display displayed.
In one embodiment, meters are shown on the video display screen to display the salient information for the game: Credits meter 22, Bet meter 24, and Paid meter 25. The Credits meter 22 displays the total number credits remaining in the credit pool; the Bet meter 24 displays the amount wagered on the current, previous, and/or upcoming poker hand and is associated with the Bet One 42 and Bet Max 44 buttons; and the Paid meter 25 displays the amount of credits won on the current or previous poker hand.
In one embodiment, the player deposits coins, tokens, paper currency, credit cards, debit cards, or other forms of physical and/or electronic currency into the coin acceptor slot 50 or a paper currency bill acceptor 52 to establish a pool of credits. The amount of this common pool of credits is displayed to the player on the credit meter 22. The pool of credits increases and decreases according to the player's wins or losses and may be supplemented, if necessary, by the player by additional deposits of coins, tokens, paper currency, credit cards, debit cards, or other forms of physical and/or electronic currency.
In one embodiment, the player sets the value of the wager by using the Bet One 42 and Bet Max 44 buttons. The bet may range between one credit and N-credits, with N equal to a predetermined maximum or set by the current value of the Credit Pool. The typical video poker gaming machine uses a five credit maximum wager.
In one embodiment, each card dealt is selected from one or more suitable decks of cards such as one or more fifty-two card traditional decks (i.e. the traditional four suits of Spades, Hearts, Diamonds, Clubs, with thirteen ranks in each suit of 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, Jack, Queen, King and Ace) plus any bonus cards added before or after the deal or the draw.
In one embodiment, the player causes the machine 10 to deal the cards by pressing the Deal button 46. Once the Deal button 46 is pressed, the wager is final and non-refundable. For each deal, the machine 10 randomly displays five cards face-up in the five card positions. In a single standard deck embodiment, a displayed card is removed from the deck and may not be dealt again during that game. Typically, only the remaining non-dealt cards in the deck are used to replace a dealt card.
In one embodiment, the player selects which cards to hold and which cards to discard using the buttons on the machine 10 or touching the cards on the video display 20 (i.e. pressing a button or touching a card will “hold” the card) Alternatively, the machine 10 may automatically select cards to hold and/or discard and then allow the player to override the selections by using the buttons or touching the display screen 20. This may be useful in a training mode.
In one embodiment, the player is paid for predetermined winning combinations of cards that appear in the final hand. Each winning combination pays the amount indicated on a pre-determined pay scale times the total amount wagered on that hand. Furthermore, the value of a winning card combination may be enhanced by the appearance of one or more Multi-Draw Bonus cards during the deal or draw. All enhanced values are also reflected on the pre-determined pay scale.
The foregoing description of various embodiments of the invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obvious modifications or variations are possible in light of the above teachings. The embodiments discussed were chosen and described to provide the best illustration of the principles of the invention and its practical application to thereby enable one of ordinary skill in the art to utilize the invention in various embodiments and with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. All such modifications and variations are within the scope of the invention as determined by the appended claims to be interpreted in accordance with the breadth to which they are fairly, legally, and equitably entitled.
This application is a continuation-in-part under 35 U.S.C. 120 of copending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/336,825, filed Dec. 17, 2008 now abandoned which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. 119(e) for U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 61/020,160 filed Jan. 10, 2008, all incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12336825 | Dec 2008 | US |
Child | 13400081 | US |