Online Poker Game Types

Most US-regulated online poker rooms spread three mainstream variants — No-Limit Texas Hold’em, Pot-Limit Omaha, and Seven-Card Stud — plus mixed-game formats during select tournament events. This hub is the navigation layer for our poker game-rules content at GamblingSite.com. Pick a variant below to jump to its dedicated rules and strategy guide, or skim the “Which game should you play?” decision tree further down if you are not sure where to start.

Short answer for new players: start with No-Limit Texas Hold’em. It is the most widely spread variant globally, has the deepest learning resources, and every other variant is easier to pick up once you understand it. If you have zero prior poker experience, begin with our complete beginner’s guide to online poker before you pick a variant.

The Four Poker Variants You Can Play in the US

The three single-variant games below are available as both cash-game tables and tournament events on most US-regulated operators. Mixed-game formats (H.O.R.S.E., 8-Game) rotate several variants inside a single tournament and are spread as tournament specialties, primarily on WSOP Online during the summer bracelet series.

2 hole cards·5 community·2–10 players

The dominant variant globally. No-Limit Hold’em is the specific format used in most cash games and nearly every major tournament, including the WSOP Main Event. Starting point for essentially every modern poker player. Deepest pool of learning resources. Every US-regulated operator spreads it at every stake.

Where to play: All four operators.
4 hole cards·5 community·2–10 players

Four hole cards instead of two, but players must use exactly two hole cards and three community cards to make a hand. Bigger pots, bigger swings, and dramatically more complex hand reading because four-card combinations multiply the number of relevant holdings. Popular with experienced Hold’em players looking for higher variance action.

Where to play: Most operators — schedule is thinner than Hold’em.

Seven-Card Stud

Intermediate
7 cards each·No community·2–8 players

Seven cards per player over five rounds, some face-up and visible to opponents. No shared community cards — every player’s hand is constructed independently. Hold’em replaced Stud as the dominant variant in the early 2000s, but Stud remains a staple of mixed-game tournaments and high-stakes cash mix. Limited cash-game spread on most US operators today.

Where to play: Limited — primarily WSOP Online mixed events.

Mixed Games (H.O.R.S.E., 8-Game)

Advanced
Rotating variants·2–8 players

Rotating-variant formats that cycle through Hold’em, Omaha Hi-Lo, Razz, Stud, and Stud Hi-Lo (H.O.R.S.E.) or add NLHE and PLO (8-Game). Tests breadth of skill across games with very different strategy frameworks. Spread primarily as tournament specialties on WSOP Online during the summer bracelet series.

Where to play: WSOP Online summer bracelet events.

Which Poker Game Should You Play?

The right variant depends on your experience level, how much variance you want in a session, and what you want out of the game. The framework below is opinionated — we think most new players overthink this decision, and the right answer for 90% of beginners is the same answer.

💡
The universal answer

If you are new to poker, start with No-Limit Texas Hold'em at $0.01/$0.02 or $0.02/$0.05 cash games. That is the single variant and stake combination that maximizes your learning per dollar risked because (a) it is the most widely spread, so you will always find a seat; (b) it has the deepest free learning resources; and (c) it is the foundation that makes Omaha and Stud easier to pick up later. Do not pick an unusual starting variant because it sounds interesting — you will spend three times as long looking up rules as you do playing hands.

If You Are Completely New to Poker

Play No-Limit Texas Hold’em. Cash games at $0.01/$0.02 stakes. One table at a time until you are comfortable with the software. There is no close second choice — Hold’em is the right answer. Start with our beginner’s guide if you have not yet memorized hand rankings or gone through the signup process.

If You Have 100+ Hours of Hold’em and Want Something Different

Pot-Limit Omaha is the natural next step. PLO uses the same betting-round structure as Hold’em but forces you to reason about four-card starting hands and exactly-two-of-four hole-card-equity math, which meaningfully changes hand reading. Expect bigger pots and bigger swings — PLO variance is roughly double NLHE’s, so your bankroll requirements increase accordingly. Start at $0.05/$0.10 PLO or the lowest PLO stake your operator spreads, not whatever cash stake you play at Hold’em.

If You Want Tournament Lottery Upside

Low-buy-in No-Limit Hold’em multi-table tournaments are the standard choice. Buy-ins from $1 to $11 at every US-regulated operator; field sizes from a few hundred to a few thousand players; prize-pool distribution pays the top 10-15% of finishers. Expect high variance — the typical tournament player cashes roughly one in five events and makes most of their annual profit from a handful of deep runs. For tournament-specific strategy and the major series calendars, see our tournaments guide.

If You Want to Test Your Breadth Across Variants

Mixed-game tournaments — H.O.R.S.E. and 8-Game in particular — are the classic breadth test. They cycle through five or eight different poker variants, each with distinct strategy, each with distinct hand-reading math. These are advanced-player territory; do not enter a mixed-game tournament until you are a comfortable Hold’em and PLO player at minimum. WSOP Online’s summer bracelet series runs mixed-game events most years.

Game Variant Availability by Operator

Every US-regulated operator spreads No-Limit Hold’em at every stake. Variant availability below Hold’em varies meaningfully between operators, and some variants are effectively tournament-only on the smaller sites. This table reflects the live lobbies as of April 2026 — rebuilt monthly.

Operator NL Hold’em Pot-Limit Omaha Stud / Mixed
PokerStars on FanDuel
NJ, PA, MI
Full schedule
Cash + MTTs + SNGs
Yes
Cash + select MTTs
Limited
COOP mixed events only
WSOP Online
NV, NJ, MI, PA
Full schedule
Cash + MTTs
Yes
Cash + MTTs
Best schedule
Bracelet mixed events
BetMGM Poker
NJ, PA, MI
Full schedule
Cash + MTTs + SNGs
Limited
Low-stakes cash only
No
Borgata Poker
NJ, PA
Full schedule
Cash + MTTs
Limited
Low-stakes cash only
No

Two practical takeaways. First, if Hold’em is all you plan to play, operator choice is mostly about bonuses, payouts, and pool depth — see our poker site ranking. Second, if you want to play Stud or mixed games, WSOP Online is functionally the only option with a meaningful schedule; the others treat those variants as afterthoughts.

This hub routes to variant-specific rules and strategy guides, but the broader poker section covers beginner walkthroughs, strategy fundamentals, tournament schedules, and operator selection. Pick the next resource that matches where you are in your poker learning.

Poker Game Types FAQ

The variant-selection questions new and intermediate players ask most often — which game to start with, what’s available at US operators, and when to expand beyond No-Limit Hold’em.

Can I play Pot-Limit Omaha on US-regulated sites?

Yes. Pot-Limit Omaha (PLO) is available on all four US-regulated operators — PokerStars on FanDuel, WSOP Online, BetMGM Poker, and Borgata Poker — as cash games. The tournament schedule for PLO is thinner than for Hold’em, and low-stakes PLO cash-game density varies by time of day. PLO is most reliably available at $0.10/$0.25 and higher stakes.

Is Seven-Card Stud still spread on US online poker sites?

Yes, but in limited quantities. WSOP Online is the only operator with a meaningful Stud schedule — primarily during the summer bracelet series when mixed-game events (H.O.R.S.E., 8-Game) draw Stud specialists. Cash-game Stud at low stakes runs intermittently on WSOP Online. BetMGM Poker and Borgata Poker do not spread Stud cash games as of April 2026. PokerStars on FanDuel runs Stud as part of select COOP mixed events only.

What’s the difference between Limit and No-Limit poker?

The difference is bet sizing. In Limit poker (also called Fixed-Limit), every bet and raise must be a fixed amount — typically the big blind preflop and on the flop, and double the big blind on the turn and river. In No-Limit poker, players can bet any amount up to their entire stack at any time. Pot-Limit is a middle ground: bets and raises can be any size up to the current pot total. No-Limit Hold’em is the dominant variant in the US online market; Limit variants are mostly spread in mixed-game rotations.

What is the easiest poker variant to learn?

No-Limit Texas Hold’em is the easiest to learn because (a) each player has only two hole cards, so the preflop hand space is small; (b) community cards are visible, so reading board texture is straightforward; and (c) there is more free learning material than for any other variant. Pot-Limit Omaha is dramatically harder to learn because four hole cards multiply the number of relevant starting combinations and the exactly-two-of-four hole-card rule changes post-flop equity math meaningfully.

Can I multi-table different variants at the same time?

Yes, but not recommended for new players. Each variant has distinct strategy — NLHE and PLO preflop ranges are completely different, and your instincts from one game will produce losing plays in the other. Experienced players multi-table within a single variant (three NLHE cash tables, for example) or within a single product category (four NLHE MTTs). Multi-tabling NLHE and PLO simultaneously is something to try only after you are a comfortable winner in each game independently.

Are mixed games suitable for intermediate players?

No. Mixed-game formats (H.O.R.S.E., 8-Game) cycle through five or eight distinct poker variants, each with its own strategy framework. Each individual variant in the rotation is harder than NLHE in isolation, and you need to play all of them competently to be profitable. Most mixed-game players are experienced tournament specialists with strong NLHE, PLO, and at least one stud-variant foundation. Intermediate players should focus on getting deep at NLHE first, then add PLO, before thinking about mixed.

Do operators offer play-money versions of each variant?

Yes. Every US-regulated operator has play-money lobbies with the same variants spread on the real-money side. Play-money games are useful for learning UI and mechanics but do not teach real-money strategy — opponents play very differently when chips carry no actual value. Use play-money to learn the software, then switch to the lowest real-money stake to start learning strategy.

Variance Differs by Variant — Play Responsibly

Every poker variant carries variance, but the shape of that variance differs meaningfully. No-Limit Hold’em variance is heavy in all-in spots; Pot-Limit Omaha variance is heavier still because four-card starting hands produce more near-coin-flip equities on the flop; tournament variance dwarfs cash-game variance because single hands can eliminate you. Match your bankroll to the variant and keep the poker bankroll separate from household finances. Every licensed US operator supports configurable deposit limits, loss limits, session timers, and self-exclusion. If play stops being entertainment or starts affecting your sleep, finances, or relationships, the resources below are free, confidential, and available 24/7.

Play Safe: Gambling should be fun, not stressful. Set limits, stick to your budget, and never chase losses. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call 1-800-522-4700 or visit ncpgambling.org. For more resources, see our Responsible Gambling page.

GS
Editorial + Poker Research
Variant availability and operator lobbies on this page were verified against each operator's live cashier and tournament schedule within the past 30 days. We do not accept operator payment for placement — every link points to our own reviews, not affiliate destinations.
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