Cajun Stud Online Free

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The game of Cajun Stud is played with any number of standard card decks that contains 52 playing cards. Before the game starts, players will have to place their Ante bet and it is considered to be primary initial bet. Besides that, during different stages of the game, players will have the opportunity to place side bets that include Board Bonus, Pocket Bonus, as well as the Lo Ball.

Mississippi Stud is not widely available at online casinos but it is available at these brands:

A free online version of Mississippi Stud. Test out your Mississippi Stud strategy here. Practice for Vegas. Cajun Sounds Internet Radio - Cajun Sounds Internet Radio plays around the clock where we feature a variety of Cajun, Creole and Swamp Pop music from generations past and present. CAJUN STUD The object of the Game is to get a five card poker hand consisting of a pair of 6’s or better. You make an initial Ante bet to receive two hole cards. Upon reviewing your two hole cards, you may Raise or Fold. If you Raise, you may Raise 1x or 3x your Ante bet. The Dealer then reveals the 3rd card in the community board.

NOTE: If you’re running IE9 and the game keeps crashing, you need to update your Java installation (for it has nothing to do with us but with Microsoft, as they kindly note in their Support Page). Speaking of upgrades, you might want to upgrade your browser to Google Chrome.

Mississippi Stud is a well-liked and a simple poker-based table game by Scientific Games. If you’re into polishing your skills while having good fun, this Java-based online trainer might be just the right thing — it allows you to play free for up to $50,000.

The PGA is our in-house developed feature that advises you on your best plays. Working like a pop-up window in your browser, it lets you know when your move might be a risky one. You can turn it on/off by selecting the checkbox “Warn on strategy errors” atop of the game screen, and you can switch between two modes while you play.

For you to make the best of it, we highly recommend reading the Wizard’s Mississippi Stud introduction. Once you get a grip at rules, strategy, paytables, and analysis, the only other decision you have to make is whether you’ll play with or without our Personal Game Advisor.

Paytable is neatly set on the right side of the screen and is quite self-explanatory.

On the bottom of the screen is a control strip that lets you set up all parameters of the game and provides for all relevant information. There is a balance field, chips and wager info, control buttons, and win amount.

Start your game...

...by making the ante bet with chips in denominations ranging from $5, $25, $100, and $500. You’ll notice yellow borders encircling them when selected. You can increase ante in each value by a single click —for $200 bet, click twice on ante field with $100 chip selected. The maximum ante is $1,000.

Two buttons — Deal and Clear — are used to direct game moves once you’ve set your ante.

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When the five cards are dealt, you’ll get two of them with face up and three with face down. Your control buttons will be replaced by four optional ones: Fold, Bet 1x, Bet 2x, and Bet 3x.

If you decide to bet, one community card will be turned over. Once you’ve examined it, you can proceed by selecting one of the offered bets. If you do so, the next community card will be turned over. In doing so, you actually have a possibility to go from 2nd Street bets all the way up to 5th Street or to fold whenever you deem proper.

When the hand ends

There will be two temporary control buttons displayed: Repeat and Clear. By pressing the former you reload previous bet settings, while by pressing the later you put yourself in the position to set a new bet.

Once the hand is dealt you can see information about the outcome right below your wagers. In case of a win, you get the info that correlates to items on the Pay Table.

This version of Mississippi Stud is quite funny and exciting to play. All relevant information is always visible, the game flow is smooth, it all develops rather quickly, and you always keep control by rather simple and intuitive command buttons.

The Personal Game Advisor works neatly and non-intrusive. While it may not always be right, it is in a number of cases which makes it a useful learning tool.

The game itself may show its volatile side on larger bets. It is quite enticing to win a large sum, particularly when betting on $500 and going all the way up to the 5th street, although, admittingly, it is much more fun to do so knowing that none of it would be applicable to real life scenario.

In any case, this online trainer is an exciting and valuable option for any type of player.

For entry-level guys, it is a nice opportunity to feel the table, options, best plays, overall vibe and mood of the game.

For advanced players, it is quite an interesting tool to improve on their game, learn new stuff (particularly when supported by Wizard’s analytical skills), and to simply train to be better without having to use real money.

Regardless of your skills level, always approach your games in a responsible and safe manner so you can have great fun while you’re at it. On our behalf, we wish you very best of luck in doing so.

lightningbolts
On trial at NYNY by Galaxy...does this not sound almost identical to Mississippi Stud? Sounds like another High Card Flush lawsuit waiting to happen:
https://www.galaxygaming.com/galaxy-games/1019/cajun-stud
Ibeatyouraces
The pay table shown on it is slightly different, not that it matters. Will be interesting to see if there is a fight over it.
Hunterhill
Some places the pay table is exactly the same,as Mississippi stud.
The mountain is tall but grass grows on top of the mountain.
Hunterhill
So what would the house edge be now that 2 pair only pays 1.5 to 1 instead of 2 to 1?
The mountain is tall but grass grows on top of the mountain.
Ibeatyouraces

So what would the house edge be now that 2 pair only pays 1.5 to 1 instead of 2 to 1?


I notice that the FH pays 11:1 and flush 7:1 also instead of 10 & 6 respectively on MS.
DUHHIIIIIIIII HEARD THAT!
beachbumbabs
Administrator
Thanks for this post from:

On trial at NYNY by Galaxy...does this not sound almost identical to Mississippi Stud? Sounds like another High Card Flush lawsuit waiting to happen:
https://www.galaxygaming.com/galaxy-games/1019/cajun-stud


IMO, it's a ripoff of MSstud and as such does not deserve your play. I think inventors' IP should be respected, not copied. Same with Heads Up Holdem, as a ripoff of UTH.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
Hunterhill

I notice that the FH pays 11:1 and flush 7:1 also instead of 10 & 6 respectively on MS.


I haven't seen that paytable yet.
Interesting.
The mountain is tall but grass grows on top of the mountain.
Ibeatyouraces

I haven't seen that paytable yet.
Interesting.


That's what it looks like on the link above.
DUHHIIIIIIIII HEARD THAT!
SM777

IMO, it's a ripoff of MSstud and as such does not deserve your play. I think inventors' IP should be respected, not copied. Same with Heads Up Holdem, as a ripoff of UTH.


I couldn't agree more.
Deucekies

IMO, it's a ripoff of MSstud and as such does not deserve your play. I think inventors' IP should be respected, not copied. Same with Heads Up Holdem, as a ripoff of UTH.


I'm surprised Heads Up Hold Em isn't catching on a lot faster. From what I understand, it's a lot cheaper to lease than UTH, and it's got a higher house edge, all while giving the player more ways to win. The recreational player thinks he's getting a better deal, and if he's the sort who doesn't like to four-bet anyway, then he is.Cajun stud online, free play
Player's Edge 21 is another game that's a carbon copy of another established classic (Spanish 21). The only differences to the main game are the 3:1 payouts paying for diamonds instead of spades, and insurance paying 5:1 on a suited blackjack.
There's supposed to be a feature that a player's suited-pair 20 is an automatic winner, but apparently casinos are allowed to opt out of that rule.
Casinos are not your friends, they want your money. But so does Disneyland. And there is no chance in hell that you will go to Disneyland and come back with more money than you went with. - AxelWolf and Mickeycrimm