Westerns without at least one poker scene just do not get commissioned. Such a movie would lack vitality and no director would want to create something that lacks punch. There is a reason why this is the way it is: poker allows us to once again become children. We feel awe at someone who can blend high art and a little bit of drama. This magic elixir that does just that is something that goes by the name of bluffing.
There is a skill to bluffing that many poker veterans still need to practise so that their opponents won’t have reason to call them on their bluff.
Bluffing is really just that: a player with a weak hand tries to let the other opponents think the hand is a good one. The player does this to drive the other players out of the pot. One of the reasons why this happens is so that the playing field can receive a bit of a trim; players with weak hands but good acting skills get a bit of a comeuppance if they use bluffing to their advantage.
The player’s cards often prescribe the type of bluffing that can get the player’s hands on the pot: players with weak cards should act as though their cards are strong; players with strong cards should act as though their cards are weak.
Bluffing isn’t an easy undertaking. It takes tremendous skill to get someone to believe your cards, which are fantastic, are not worthy of being called poker cards. But something else is as difficult as bluffing: the threat of a bluff. How do you know that the player opposite you is bluffing? What makes you believe they are bluffing? Or what convinces you the player is not bluffing and is being honest in their dealings?
This is something that can stump even the most experienced poker player so it’s worth your while to get in as much practise as possible. Realise that the best strategy is to expect someone to call on half of all your bluffs. There will be errors but hopefully they won’t overwhelm you.
Author bio:
All Africa Poker wrote this article about the fine art of bluffing in poker.