If you enjoyed this animation, make sure to check out our other videos which feature these fan-favorite characters getting into all sorts of fun (and trouble). Watch them here: bit.ly/WhyDoCatsActWeird, bit.ly/TEDEdNakedMoleRat, and bit.ly/TEDEdDivorce. And let us know what other adventures Grizmo should take on ⬇
Playing cards were invented in China by courtesans who couldn't afford expensive hand-carved dominoes, so they made cheaper ones out of paper, another Chinese invention. @@Tom_277
Fun Fact: As the video shows, “Wild Bill” Hickok was found dead holding a Queen, two Aces, and two eights; what is now referred to as the “Dead Man’s Hand”.
"Of course I lied. It's poker," said Tony G to Phil Hellmuth once Hellmuth realized that Tony had lied when he said that he hadn't looked at his hand. Tony had AK and won the pot and Hellmuth was salty 😂😅
I had classmates play poker during lunch, we would use snacks as a way to bet, but I didn’t learn about game theory until this summer. I also didn’t learn about its uses in war-far until this video. This was an enjoyable video
Technically it's the prisoner's dilemma that inspired the core game theory concepts of studying cooperation vs hostility. I highly recommend to watch the latest near 20 minutes video from Vertasium on this exact topic of game theory and it's uses in geopolitics and other areas of day to day life.
I recall my friend group had a poker phase, we only gambled chips without value, but it was really exciting whenever someone had all the chips, made it feel like they were king/queen. We would reset the chip account every weekend or so and start over, the strats becoming more cunning over time
It reminds me of Terence Hill's "accidentally" flipped hand from Odds and Evens. If you look up 'Terence Hill Odds and Evens showing hand' on image search, it should be in the first 5 hits. Also: that film is gold.
@@Gracericon For the uninitiated: MatPat did an episode covering how the handling of economics in Massively Multiplayer Online games can be used as a testing ground for economic ideas in meatspace, and prefaced it with how the series shared a name with a concept in economics. This field was properly acknowledged in that episode. Although mathematical game theory isn't discussed much beyond that gag, I still appreciate the acknowledgement.
What separates Poker from Brag is checking. In Poker, you're allowed to check (to not bet but stay in the current hand) if either you made the Big Blind bet and no one raised it or if no one else has bet yet in a subsequent betting round. In Brag, you must either bet or fold every turn, so you can run out of chips fairly quickly if you're not careful.
I wish you can make a video about the stand off and rivalry between Britain and France through out history which determined the fate of the modern world beginning with the Norman invasion and throughout the one hundred years war, the seven year war, and the napoleonic wars. The factors the tipped the scale in favor of the British, etc.
Remind me of one of poker game (with story) named Card Shark. The game itself encourage players to play with cheat while doing Poker at France society.
Oh that quote from Tony at the beginning “of course I lied, it’s poker!” When he lied to Phil helmuth about if he was betting blind or not. Watching Phil lose it was awesome. I love them both. Watching them bicker is like chefs kiss.
I remember that game, when Tony G and Phill Hellmuth are playing this hand, when Tony said to Phill "I'm going all in, without looking" and Phill believed him having a bad hand and then Tony Said "OF COURSE I LIED ITS POKER"
I began to play poker on discord and discovered a game full of mysticism, variance but strategy. I always loved games like go and chess but poker has something special. A magical aspect that seems to never amaze because of the different stories that are told every hand. That being said, it is still a betting game, so one has to remain aware of the dangers of not managing your bankroll correctly.
Poker origins are believed to stem from different card games in Europe and Asia, gradually morphing into the game we recognize today. The 19th-century United States played a pivotal role in its evolution, with poker gaining traction in various forms, from community games on riverboats to smoky saloons during the Gold Rush era. The game continued to evolve and gain popularity, especially in the 20th century, with variants like Texas Hold'em capturing the imagination of players worldwide. Nowadays online platforms popularize this game 😁. Do you think it's legal to play poker online, isn't it more like a gamble.
I'll never forger when I first started playing Hold em. It was right after the 2002 WSOP when Varkoni won it. My friend had a table and we would go over his house once a week. We were all Soph in HS. Then in 2003 it got huge cause of the late night poker show on the travel channel, and then Moneymaker winning on ESPN. Fun times man.
Texas Holdem taps in to humanity: 1. 80% skill, 20% luck 2. Understanding of psychology, and manipulation of it 3. Presentation vs. reality 4. High risk, high reward 5. Ego Texas Holdem has all of this, and so it's no wonder it's so popular.
And regardless of the version of poker, the ranks on hands (from best hand down to worst hand) are based on rarity of natural occurrence (no wild cards/no cheating) in Five Card Stud.
It is the variant with the perfect balance of having the most concealed information, while still having public information. Also, a lot of credit has to go to ESPN's coverage of the main event in 2003. Many people say it was the "Moneymaker effect", but I disagree. While I also started playing poker because of that tournament, I didn't care about him, I just found the coverage of the tournament to be entertaining and I wanted to play.
Everyone can play, but most people play badly. The beauty of the game is that the odds are mostly still pretty good for the player that's behind, so bad players will still win more than they would in most other games. That keeps them in. The winning player works out how to use that information over large time scales.
If you fully shuffle a deck you will get a sequence of 52 cards that has never been duplicated in the past, and should take a million years to be replicated in the future
@@DefundtheIRS1776 is it? i figured with the amount of people playing poker at any given time there would be sure to be a repeat so i figure it'd actually be **lower** than a million idk
@@gas-drawls The number of unique orderings is 52! = 8 * 10^67. Estimating the 52 card deck originated around the year 1500, gives about 500 years of shuffles, you would need 4.4 * 10^62 unique shuffles each day to get them all by now. That doesn't mean two random shuffles weren't the same, just incredibly unlikely. Going for 10^59 years brings it down to only 2 million unique shuffles per day before a card ordering is repeated. With the number casinos, number of tables/decks in each casino, plus everyone else playing with a deck of cards in the world, that seems very reasonable across the entire world, just have to keep shuffling.
@@acoupleofschoes let's give a well-overestimated 100 shuffles per person on the planet per day, that'd be 800 billion or 8 x 10^11 shuffles per day. so we need 10^56 days - or 2.7 x 10^53 years - to get a duplicated shuffle. That's, what, 270 thousand trillion trillion trillion trillion years? Better yet, let's say each person on the planet was running a supercomputer that could churn out 1 million shuffles per second. Then that'd be 8 billion x 1 million x 86,400 shuffles per day = 6.9 x 10^20 shuffles per day, requiring 1.2 x 10^47 days or 3 x 10^44 years to cover them all - that's 300 million trillion trillion trillion years. A perfect NCAA bracket will be made trillions of times over before a random shuffle is duplicated. You can bet on it.
I really think what made Texas Holdem a great game for tournaments and television is the fact that when a small pair vs 2 high cards get all in before the flop it is very close to a coin flip for who will win the hand
fun fuct: term river (last round of betting) is called river because on the river pot is biggest so it was also most lucrative place for cheating if they catch someone they throw him in to to river(as mention was often played on the ships )
it’s ironic that the quote “of course i lied… it’s poker.” came from a hand where Tony G bluffed with the goods. Tony G said multiple times that he hadnt looked at his cards (he did look but no one saw him) so that his opponent Phil Hellmuth would put all of his chips in the pot. It was like a bluff inside of a bluff.
I didn’t know what “Texas Hold ‘Em” was, apart from Beyoncé. I always had a hunch it was a game she was referring to. The more ya know, I hate lottery anyways. Lmae 😂😂
James McManus? HE CALLED ME WITH JACK HIGH! I'll see myself out. Kidding aside, Cowboys Full is a pretty cool book. Check it out if you're at all interested in the pokers.
If you enjoyed this animation, make sure to check out our other videos which feature these fan-favorite characters getting into all sorts of fun (and trouble). Watch them here: bit.ly/WhyDoCatsActWeird, bit.ly/TEDEdNakedMoleRat, and bit.ly/TEDEdDivorce. And let us know what other adventures Grizmo should take on ⬇
I think it's "Gizmo"
Oh, sorry, TED-Ed I was confused I thought it was "Gizmo", Not "Grizmo".
Keep up the good work and happy new year!
Just wondering, did poker come from China?
Playing cards were invented in China by courtesans who couldn't afford expensive hand-carved dominoes, so they made cheaper ones out of paper, another Chinese invention. @@Tom_277
Fun Fact: As the video shows, “Wild Bill” Hickok was found dead holding a Queen, two Aces, and two eights; what is now referred to as the “Dead Man’s Hand”.
That's awesome and really cool that you caught that :)
m e t a l
Mice 😮
Wait, I thought that was the Spades' Royal Flush. Why was that in a magician's book?
Are you sure it was a queen?
That starting quote from tony G after he lied to hellmuth that’s gold
Can't believe the quote is from Tony "Overqualified" G 😂
@@buzz092 Tony on yer bike Guoga
He's a joke of a human being and diplomat
3:34 dead man’s hand, nice touch
The animation is really nice as always. I never knew I would learn so much from poker lore
Maybe it was made with Moho?
I died when I saw they used Tony G's quote at the beginning lol
Haha it feels very profound at the start of a Ted ed video
What's the quote?
@@coldfire39of course i lied. Its poker Phil. What do you think this is? Check The big game and find the moment its hilarious
"Of course I lied. It's poker," said Tony G to Phil Hellmuth once Hellmuth realized that Tony had lied when he said that he hadn't looked at his hand. Tony had AK and won the pot and Hellmuth was salty 😂😅
I loved it!
5 sec in, already loving it. To see Tony Gs quote to Helmut here was a real gem
me too. I can hear tony saying it too. great quote
@@jasperhalsey8574 And I can picture Hellmuth's disgusted face after he said it :-)
Tony g sucks
Tony g stinks
I had classmates play poker during lunch, we would use snacks as a way to bet, but I didn’t learn about game theory until this summer. I also didn’t learn about its uses in war-far until this video. This was an enjoyable video
Technically it's the prisoner's dilemma that inspired the core game theory concepts of studying cooperation vs hostility. I highly recommend to watch the latest near 20 minutes video from Vertasium on this exact topic of game theory and it's uses in geopolitics and other areas of day to day life.
A similar thing happened in my wedding class. Sometimes, usually when the teacher was out, some of the guys would play poker in the classroom.
As someone who has watched a lot of poker, the quote at the beginning had me in stiches
Gotta love tony g ❤
Exactly what I was thinking lol, I quote that all the time
Yes, this is technically education.
Poker -cheating- is part of -education- statistics studies.
Say, in which way is it not?
@@Irondragon1945 I'm having fun
We truly live in a society where that isn't the norm for education
I bet ya
From bluffs to busts, McManus unravels the captivating history of poker in a must-watch!
McManus as in Jim "Jack High" McManus?
@@damightybenstein Queen high
@@jamesmcmanus6484 Good catch. #HeCalledMeWithJackHigh
@@damightybenstein Thanks, DaMightyBen!
Love that Tony g quote, I can hear it ringing in my ears ❤
I recall my friend group had a poker phase, we only gambled chips without value, but it was really exciting whenever someone had all the chips, made it feel like they were king/queen. We would reset the chip account every weekend or so and start over, the strats becoming more cunning over time
That is neat, i like that.
As always a really interesting and well made Video!!!
Absolutely love this wacky style of animation. The reversed bowl at 3:43 is hilarious 😂
It reminds me of Terence Hill's "accidentally" flipped hand from Odds and Evens. If you look up 'Terence Hill Odds and Evens showing hand' on image search, it should be in the first 5 hits. Also: that film is gold.
Poker is the reason Game Theory was born
Matpat: A GAME THEORY
Ha yeah! … man I’m gonna miss him
RIP
the fact that matthew actually mentioned exactly that
@@Gracericon For the uninitiated: MatPat did an episode covering how the handling of economics in Massively Multiplayer Online games can be used as a testing ground for economic ideas in meatspace, and prefaced it with how the series shared a name with a concept in economics. This field was properly acknowledged in that episode. Although mathematical game theory isn't discussed much beyond that gag, I still appreciate the acknowledgement.
What separates Poker from Brag is checking.
In Poker, you're allowed to check (to not bet but stay in the current hand) if either you made the Big Blind bet and no one raised it or if no one else has bet yet in a subsequent betting round. In Brag, you must either bet or fold every turn, so you can run out of chips fairly quickly if you're not careful.
I love both poker and game theory, but hadn't known how important the former was to the conception of the latter!
I wish you can make a video about the stand off and rivalry between Britain and France through out history which determined the fate of the modern world beginning with the Norman invasion and throughout the one hundred years war, the seven year war, and the napoleonic wars. The factors the tipped the scale in favor of the British, etc.
Me too
Remind me of one of poker game (with story) named Card Shark. The game itself encourage players to play with cheat while doing Poker at France society.
Yes! And you get to do both cheats mentioned in the video: signaling, and cold decking
Dude I love this art style
Yeah, man 4ra’s explanations are so clear. even newbies can start easily now.
lmao, the Tony G quote at the beggining
Game changed my life! Forever gratefull
Awesome as always thanks
Bro, i think 4ra’s new ads show their commitment to quality. love seeing their dedication.
3:16 The Full Tilt chip sounds really hit me in the nostalgia
Oh that quote from Tony at the beginning “of course I lied, it’s poker!” When he lied to Phil helmuth about if he was betting blind or not. Watching Phil lose it was awesome. I love them both. Watching them bicker is like chefs kiss.
I remember that game, when Tony G and Phill Hellmuth are playing this hand, when Tony said to Phill "I'm going all in, without looking" and Phill believed him having a bad hand and then Tony Said "OF COURSE I LIED ITS POKER"
ITS POKER PHIL!
Absolutely classic. On your bike!
Getting this defen game some love, I’m here for it ❤
2:14 the boat should be going in reverse!
This is the type of content i like. 🤩
Your channel is the best place to learn about trading. Thanks for your valuable work!
I began to play poker on discord and discovered a game full of mysticism, variance but strategy. I always loved games like go and chess but poker has something special. A magical aspect that seems to never amaze because of the different stories that are told every hand. That being said, it is still a betting game, so one has to remain aware of the dangers of not managing your bankroll correctly.
Did you mean “cease to never amaze”
Chatgpt ahh comment
Can you elaborate on the mysticism you experienced?
How do you play poker on discord
Poker origins are believed to stem from different card games in Europe and Asia, gradually morphing into the game we recognize today. The 19th-century United States played a pivotal role in its evolution, with poker gaining traction in various forms, from community games on riverboats to smoky saloons during the Gold Rush era. The game continued to evolve and gain popularity, especially in the 20th century, with variants like Texas Hold'em capturing the imagination of players worldwide. Nowadays online platforms popularize this game 😁.
Do you think it's legal to play poker online, isn't it more like a gamble.
Professional hold'em players say it's 70% skill 30% luck. That's why they say you often see the top players at the same final table.
@@Shivas-cj7vr 🤔😑
When Finch talks, bettors listen. His promos on 4RA make so much sense!
I'll never forger when I first started playing Hold em. It was right after the 2002 WSOP when Varkoni won it. My friend had a table and we would go over his house once a week. We were all Soph in HS. Then in 2003 it got huge cause of the late night poker show on the travel channel, and then Moneymaker winning on ESPN. Fun times man.
Finch's partnership with 4ra? A perfect match. Brings credibility and loads of fun!
Jim McManus is one of the finest writers: I’ve greatly enjoyed all of his books. Positively Fifth Street was an American classic!
This is just the best strategy ever. Thank you for helping us to join you on a master level :)
I would say that approximately 20 seconds of the 5:42 address the question "Why is Texas Hold 'em so popular?"
i also learned the etymology of "discard" with this video. interesting
Weird art. Great video.
Texas Holdem taps in to humanity:
1. 80% skill, 20% luck
2. Understanding of psychology, and manipulation of it
3. Presentation vs. reality
4. High risk, high reward
5. Ego
Texas Holdem has all of this, and so it's no wonder it's so popular.
TED-Ed has upped the ante with this poker video
And regardless of the version of poker, the ranks on hands (from best hand down to worst hand) are based on rarity of natural occurrence (no wild cards/no cheating) in Five Card Stud.
What an opening quote
It is the variant with the perfect balance of having the most concealed information, while still having public information.
Also, a lot of credit has to go to ESPN's coverage of the main event in 2003. Many people say it was the "Moneymaker effect", but I disagree. While I also started playing poker because of that tournament, I didn't care about him, I just found the coverage of the tournament to be entertaining and I wanted to play.
Such satisfying sound design 🏆
omg, i love how you content is good
not possible to produce this kind of high quality videos on a regular, thanks
Greetings from Deadwood, SD!
The final resting place of Wild Bill Hikok.
One of my favourite quotes regarding the popularity of texas hold 'em is that 'everyone thinks they can play'.
Everyone can play, but most people play badly. The beauty of the game is that the odds are mostly still pretty good for the player that's behind, so bad players will still win more than they would in most other games. That keeps them in. The winning player works out how to use that information over large time scales.
An absolute poker history gem - the art of bluffing, the strategies of betting, and the stories of busting unfold brilliantly!
Fun and informative. Thx James
I'll be in Las Vegas in June for the World Series of Poker!
As a poker player now I am satisfied 😂
If you fully shuffle a deck you will get a sequence of 52 cards that has never been duplicated in the past, and should take a million years to be replicated in the future
Did the math on this I think 1 million is a super lowball
@@DefundtheIRS1776 is it? i figured with the amount of people playing poker at any given time there would be sure to be a repeat so i figure it'd actually be **lower** than a million idk
@@gas-drawls The number of unique orderings is 52! = 8 * 10^67. Estimating the 52 card deck originated around the year 1500, gives about 500 years of shuffles, you would need 4.4 * 10^62 unique shuffles each day to get them all by now. That doesn't mean two random shuffles weren't the same, just incredibly unlikely.
Going for 10^59 years brings it down to only 2 million unique shuffles per day before a card ordering is repeated. With the number casinos, number of tables/decks in each casino, plus everyone else playing with a deck of cards in the world, that seems very reasonable across the entire world, just have to keep shuffling.
@@gas-drawlsjust a lot of guessing but I think since the start of the 52 card deck there hasn’t been 2 identical shuffles, in theory.
@@acoupleofschoes let's give a well-overestimated 100 shuffles per person on the planet per day, that'd be 800 billion or 8 x 10^11 shuffles per day. so we need 10^56 days - or 2.7 x 10^53 years - to get a duplicated shuffle. That's, what, 270 thousand trillion trillion trillion trillion years?
Better yet, let's say each person on the planet was running a supercomputer that could churn out 1 million shuffles per second. Then that'd be 8 billion x 1 million x 86,400 shuffles per day = 6.9 x 10^20 shuffles per day, requiring 1.2 x 10^47 days or 3 x 10^44 years to cover them all - that's 300 million trillion trillion trillion years.
A perfect NCAA bracket will be made trillions of times over before a random shuffle is duplicated. You can bet on it.
Loved this!
I joined 4ra’s fantasy league and it’s fantastic! the new ad convinced me to try it.
I really think what made Texas Holdem a great game for tournaments and television is the fact that when a small pair vs 2 high cards get all in before the flop it is very close to a coin flip for who will win the hand
Brooo, 4ra’s latest features have made betting so much cooler. tonight’s match is going to be lit!
bruh, awesome Chintis Lundgren work)
حلو الحلقة بتحكي عن تاريخ poker و انه و ارتباطه بعلم الرياضيات بغض النظر عن انه ضياع للمال،اتمنى تترجم الي العربي
لعبة ممتعه
What an opening quote
fun fuct: term river (last round of betting) is called river because on the river pot is biggest so it was also most lucrative place for cheating if they catch someone they throw him in to to river(as mention was often played on the ships )
Love the animation style
What a quote
I'm here because of that Beyoncé song. From South Africa 🥰 didn't know what a Texas holdem is...
Lady gaga "poker face" vs beyoncé "texas hold'em"
Combo:telephone
The 4ra IPL lottery is crazy fun. tried my luck today, and it was so exciting!
Starting with that Tony G quote is wild ifykyk 😂
TONY G A LEGEND !!! 🦅🦅🦅
it’s ironic that the quote “of course i lied… it’s poker.” came from a hand where Tony G bluffed with the goods. Tony G said multiple times that he hadnt looked at his cards (he did look but no one saw him) so that his opponent Phil Hellmuth would put all of his chips in the pot. It was like a bluff inside of a bluff.
You forgot Phil after “it’s poker”. The funniest poker interaction I’ve ever seen
I know, right, friend? His gameplay analysis is why I trust 4RBT now. Finch knows his cricket!
The cricket vibes at 4ra are stronger with Finch, man. It's like having a captain for our betting team!
4:36 hey I’ve seen this one before!
I love the Tony G quote
4:37 i swear everything reminds me of Mat Pat seens he announce he’s going…
But that’s just a theory a game theory
I didn’t know what “Texas Hold ‘Em” was, apart from Beyoncé. I always had a hunch it was a game she was referring to. The more ya know, I hate lottery anyways. Lmae 😂😂
Texas hold ‘em is by no means the lottery it is a game of more skill than luck if you actually know how to play
Is that the "dead man's hand" at 3:34?
That's great ....Thanks
I wanna learn to play this original New Orleans poker
As a professional poker player; I really appreciate this. Giving light to the great game known to man.
I loveee poker ❤
I LOOOOOVE poker.
WE GETTING OUT OF THE POKER TABLE WITH THIS VIDEO😂
WE GETTING OUT OF DEBT WITH THIS ONE 🗣️ 🔥🔥🔥🔥
The Tony G quote is so iconic
James McManus? HE CALLED ME WITH JACK HIGH!
I'll see myself out.
Kidding aside, Cowboys Full is a pretty cool book. Check it out if you're at all interested in the pokers.
I had queen high!
@@jamesmcmanus6484 The original "honey, he called me with Q-T" 😀
Omg… It’s all Game Theory!
4:36 It's just a theory...
Nice animations
4:36 ...Say that again
Triggered by that opening quote haha
We called it "Pusoy" in the Philippines and it's really popular especially during funerals (lamay).
"He called me with Jack high!!"
(Old timers will remember that one, and so will James McManus)
Of course I lied Phil! Its Poker! *Phil raging hard*
But that's just a theory, a GAME THEORY
Thanks for watching.
I have! A friend recommended it to me. It’s been pretty fun so far. What games have you been playing