Teen Patti Hand Rankings Explained: From Trail to High Card

Knowing your hand rankings cold is what separates confident Teen Patti players from nervous ones. Before you even download the game from a site like 3pattimaster, it pays to learn how the hands stack up, because every betting decision depends on how strong your three cards are. Here is the full ranking order, from the best hand to the weakest.

The strongest hand is the trail, also called a set or three of a kind: three cards of the same rank, such as three aces. Three aces is the best possible trail, and three twos is the lowest. If two players somehow claim a trail, the higher rank wins.

Next comes the pure sequence, or straight flush: three consecutive cards of the same suit, like 5-6-7 of hearts. A-2-3 is the highest pure sequence in most rule sets, followed by A-K-Q, and the order continues downward.

Third is the sequence, or run: three consecutive cards that are not all the same suit, such as 8-9-10 of mixed suits. It beats everything below it but loses to any pure sequence.

Fourth is the colour, or flush: three cards of the same suit that are not in sequence. When two players hold a colour, you compare the highest card, then the second, then the third to decide the winner.

Fifth is the pair: two cards of the same rank plus one odd card. Between two pairs, the higher pair wins; if the pairs match, the side card, or kicker, decides.

Finally, when nothing else forms, you have a high card. The player with the highest single card wins, and ties are broken by the next-highest cards. Ace-high is the strongest high card hand.

A useful memory trick is the rarity rule: the harder a hand is to make, the higher it ranks. Trails are rarest, high cards most common. Once these rankings are second nature, you can focus on reading opponents and managing your chips. When you are ready to practise, download the app from the Teen Patti Master APK page on 3pattimaster. As always, play responsibly and only if you are 18 or older.

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