First, it picked a random starting hand for the player, a random dealer hole-card and a random Flop card. The first simulation (one dealer card, one Flop card) ran as follows. Known: One Dealer Hole-Card, One Flop Card In the second simulation, I assumed the AP also knew the River card. In the first simulation, I assumed the AP also knew one of the three Flop cards. In each case I assumed the AP knew his two cards and one dealer hole-card when the cards were dealt. Instead, I decided to approach this project by running two big Monte-Carlo simulations. Running a complete cycle for each hole-carding opportunity would take approximately 310 hours to complete. This post considers these two lucrative opportunities. Typically, the AP will see a dealer hole-card together with either a Flop card or a River card. Like its first cousin Ultimate Texas Hold'em, when the dealer's procedure breaks down in THB, two separate hole-cards are usually exposed. In this post I covered the situation when the AP sees one dealer hole-card, which gives the AP a 7.61% edge over the house with perfect play.
There is no doubt that Texas Hold'em Bonus Poker (THB) has a big hole-card issue.