Chase The Flush App

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Chase The Flush App Rating: 9,3/10 9960 votes
  1. Chase The Flush Odds
  2. Chase The Flush Practice
  3. Chase The Flush Approach
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  • App Review: The Chase. Posted on December 21, 2012. January 1, 2014. By Flush the Fashion. I don’t really watch too much TV at the moment. It’s not that I am too clever or intellectual, most of the time I am too busy to get into stuff, plus most programmes are actually really rubbish.

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28 members have voted

gordonm888

I spent many hours in the past few days writing a calculator for CHP (similar to Miplets, but which is still incomplete for certain kinds of 3-card flush hands) and developing a strategy for 2-card flushes based on the assumption that a winning 2-card flush has a Return of 0. When miplet posted his calculator (which is awesome) I did comparisons between his calculator and mine and I found a difference in calculated results for 2-card flush hands. Which led me to this discovery of a contradiction between the posted rules and the way that others have interpreted them.


Here is the strategy I mentioned, which is correct if it turns out that the X-Tra bet is lost on a winning 2-card flush.
EDIT: This strategy does not have the player betting frequently enough to match the frequency with which the 2-card flush is shown to win on Steve Howe's table. So, the player strategy used to develop Howe's table was almost certainly based on the stipulation that a winning 2-card flush gets a PUSH on the X-Tra bet and has a Return of +1. I see the handwriting on the wall . . . . but let's wait on Shackleford to resolve this.
Basic Strategy: When to Bet (vs Fold) a 2-Flush in Chase the Flush
When you get to the River in Chase the Flush and your longest flush is 2 cards -and I assume that you have checked up to this point –you face the decision: FOLD and forsake your ante bet, or BET the 1-unit ALL-IN BET and hope to find the dealer with a 2-Flush hand and TIE or WIN.
Proposed Basic Strategy Rules
If your longest flush is a 2-card Flush on the river:
FOLD: Whenever the board (the 4 face-up cards) contains a 2-card (or longer) flush.
When the board is rainbow –has a suit distribution of 1-1-1-1:
FOLD: When your strongest 2-Flush is Q-High or lower.
When there are no aces on the board
The most common situation is to have no aces on the board. When there are no aces on a board with a suit distribution of 1-1-1-1, you should FOLD except:
BET if your strongest 2-Flush is A-x,
BET if your strongest 2-Flush is K-x and “x” –the 2nd card in your 2-flush - is the highest card on the board (other cards may have the same rank but not be higher).
When there are aces on a rainbow board
1 Ace on a Rainbow Board
BET: 2-card flush AJ+, and A-10 when at least two cards on the board are 9 or lower. Otherwise FOLD a 2-card flush.
2 Aces on a Rainbow Board
BET: 2-card flush AQ+, and A-J when at least two cards on the board are 10 or lower. Otherwise FOLD a 2-card flush
3 or 4 Aces on a Rainbow Board
BET 2-card flush AK or AQ, otherwise fold.
Last edited by: gordonm888 on Aug 17, 2016
Chase the flush approach
So many better men, a few of them friends, are dead. And a thousand thousand slimy things live on, and so do I.
Joeman
FWIW, I played the demo on the AGS website until I got to a showdown where my 2-card flush beat the dealer's 2-card flush. The result was that both the Ante and the X-Tra Bonus bet pushed. The All-In bet paid even money.
Also of note was that the layout on the demo shows the X-Tra Bonus paytable, which lists the payouts for 4-, 5-, 6-, & 7-card flushes. On the last line of the paytable, it does not reference a '3-card flush,' but instead reads: All Other Flushes .... Push.
Chase The Flush App
Wizard
Administrator

Rule 13 says:
13. If the player has the higher hand, then the Ante* and All In bets shall pay even money and the X-Tra Bonus bet according to the pay table below.
*: Please note that for purposes of adjudicating the Ante wager, rule 11 supersedes this rule. In other words, if the dealer does not qualify, then the Ante will be returned before any comparison of the player and dealer hands.
and the X-Tra Bonus Bet Table is:
X-Tra Bonus Pay Table
Event Pays
7-card flush_____ 250 to 1
6-card flush_____ 50 to 1
5-card flush_____ 5 to 1
4-card flush_____ 1 to 1
3-card flush_____ Push
All other_________ Loss
a 2-card flush falls into the category of 'all other' and thus the X-tra Bonus bet should be a loss. What else could this line labeled 'All other' possibly be referring to?
I still believe the Steve Howe table posted on WOO is wrong.

Chase The Flush Odds


Where does it say that? If you're referring to my site, please refresh the page.
It's not whether you win or lose; it's whether or not you had a good bet.
ThatDonGuy
Some quick simulating of 300 million hands shows that the strategy for making the 3x bet is with three suited hole cards, or:
A,6 or better suited
A,5 suited and 4 (2)
A,4 suited and 4 (3)
A,3 suited and 6 (4)
A,2 suited and 6 (5)
K,Q suited and 8 (7)
K,J suited and 9 (8)
K,10 suited and 10 (9)
K,9 suited and J
K,8 suited and J
K,7 suited and Q (J)
K,6 suited and Q (J)
K,5 suited and Q
K,4 suited and K (Q)
K,3 suited and K
K,2 suited and K
(Q,J suited and K)
Q,5-10 (3-10) suited and A
In each case, the 'and' card should be that card or better (e.g. 'A,5 suited and 4' is Ace-5 suited and 4 or better).
Values in parentheses came out negative in the simulation, but less than 2% negative.
gordonm888
Quote: gordonm888


and the X-Tra Bonus Bet Table is:
X-Tra Bonus Pay Table
Event Pays
7-card flush_____ 250 to 1
6-card flush_____ 50 to 1
5-card flush_____ 5 to 1
4-card flush_____ 1 to 1
3-card flush_____ Push
All other_________ Loss
a 2-card flush falls into the category of 'all other' and thus the X-tra Bonus bet should be a loss. What else could this line labeled 'All other' possibly be referring to?
I still believe the Steve Howe table posted on WOO is wrong.


Where does it say that? If you're referring to my site, please refresh the page.

Chase The Flush Practice


Okay, so I refreshed the WOO page on Chase the Flush and see that you've updated the page and removed the last line form the X-Tra Bonus Payout Table that says 'All Other_____Loss.' That clears up the contradiction/ambiguity that I've been asking about, which is what I needed.
So many better men, a few of them friends, are dead. And a thousand thousand slimy things live on, and so do I.
SM777

I generally say that too. However, the crowd here is not the average crowd of ploppies. I could list some negatives about the game but I still feel it is the best field trial game I've seen for while.


You must've missed Zappit Blackjack at The Venetian/Palazzo a few months ago.....
GeoDoorMan
I believe that once you have the 'best practices' betting system down for UTH playing Chase the Flush is not dumbing down my skills. I think it's just adding a new set of skills (Q-9+suited) and trying to figure out a new best practices for the 2nd and 3rd decision bets.
I've been playing the game for 3 weeks @ Redhawk, Placerville CA.
Winning sessions 4
Losing sessions 2
My impression is its a good game for UTH fans.
My $0.02

Chase The Flush Approach

GeoDoorMan

Problem is, civilians do not play well enough to achieve this 0.53%. They're after the Trips or progressive bet winnings.

Chase The Flush Poker Free


Frequent (above average) players of UTH likely realize your statement, however in Chase the Flush the 'Same Suit' bonus is more often to pay large returns than the Trips bet in UTH.
My $0.02
The man with a plan
jetzzfan
I played this for an hour or so at Lone Butte Casino in Chandler, Arizona a couple weeks ago on the day that it opened. They didn't have the right type of shuffler, so they substituted a Three Card Poker shuffler and for the community cards discarded the top card of two 3-card hands. I found it to be an OK game, but I prefer UTH for a carnival game. The dealers told me that they only practiced a few hands each before it went live, so it went fairly slow even though I was the only one at the table.
Also, the pay table for the Same Suit side bet had a 500:1 payout for the 7-card flush, but same payouts for all other flushes. My math after using the Wizard's table makes me think that the side bet HE is then 4.18% at this table.
kevins59
Just curious if there is a final consensus on strategy for this game. 3rd time I played this game I hit a 7 card straight flush and won $10k on my $5 Same Suit bet. It was blind luck but now I'm hooked although I haven't been back yet since I won (been playing the demo game).


Chase the Flush combines the betting structure of Ultimate Texas Hold’em with the hand grading of High Card Flush. Luxor and Silverton are the only two casinos to play the game in Las Vegas. The minimum bet is $5 at each.

How to Play Chase the Flush

Players receive three cards after making an Ante bet. This is a difference from Ultimate Texas Hold’em, where players only receive two cards. The dealer also receives three cards.

A player may check or bet three times the Ante. After that betting round, two community cards are exposed. The player may then check or bet two times the Ante. Two more community cards are then shown. The player must either match the Ante bet or fold. A player that bets at any point is done with action in the hand and waits until all community cards are shown.

The best flush wins. The rank is first based on the number of suited cards. The second-ranking is the value of the flush cards. An ace plays high. The dealer must have a three-card nine or better to qualify. If the dealer fails to qualify, the Ante automatically pushes. The Raise bets still play. These Raises are paid even money on a winning hand. Note that all side bets except for the Same Suit bet lose if the dealer’s hand beats the player’s one.

Playing Chase the Flush in Las Vegas