Holding good cards is only half of the skill on Tiger Club; the other half is translating raw combinations into concrete table actions. Our Dragon Tiger Club editorial desk compiled this chart to help Pakistani players decide — at a glance — when to raise, hold, request a sideshow or walk away. Below you will find all six 3 Patti hand categories, each with its real occurrence rate on the Tiger Club app and our recommended play.

Complete Ranking: Six Hand Categories from Strongest to Weakest

#1 — STRONGEST HAND

Trail (Three of a Kind / Set)

All three cards share the same rank — the ultimate hand in the Tiger Club card hierarchy.

Example: A♠ A♥ A♦ — the unbeatable Ace Trail · K♣ K♠ K♥ — King Trail

Statistical Odds: Shows up in roughly 0.24% of deals — expect it about once in every 425 rounds

Tiger Club Play: Keep your cards hidden and remain blind to inflate the pot. A Trail should never be folded under any circumstances on Tiger Club.

#2

Pure Sequence (Straight Flush)

Three cards that run consecutively within a single suit — almost as rare as a Trail.

Example: 5♥ 6♥ 7♥ · J♠ Q♠ K♠

Statistical Odds: Appears in about 0.22% of rounds — once every 460 hands approximately on Tiger Club

Tiger Club Play: Bet with confidence and raise the stakes. Only consider a sideshow if you believe another player might be sitting on a Trail.

#3

Sequence (Straight / Run)

Three consecutive cards drawn from different suits.

Example: 4♣ 5♥ 6♠ · 10♦ J♣ Q♥

Statistical Odds: Roughly 3.26% — surfaces once every 31 rounds on Tiger Club tables

Tiger Club Play: Reveal your hand and bet at a steady pace. When the pot grows substantial, a sideshow can knock out shaky opponents.

#4

Color (Flush)

Three same-suit cards that do not form a consecutive run.

Example: 2♦ 7♦ J♦ · 3♠ 8♠ K♠

Statistical Odds: Around 4.96% — you'll encounter one roughly every 20 hands on Tiger Club

Tiger Club Play: With Ace-high or King-high Flush, continue betting on Tiger Club. For anything below 7-high, trigger a sideshow to test your standing before investing further.

#5

Pair (Two of a Kind)

Two cards sharing the same rank accompanied by one unrelated card.

Example: 9♣ 9♥ 4♦ · A♠ A♦ 7♣

Statistical Odds: 16.94% — roughly one out of every six hands dealt

Tiger Club Play: Ace or King Pairs deserve aggressive seen-play and sideshow requests on Tiger Club. Pairs of 6 or lower warrant caution — retreat if opponents push hard.

#6 — WEAKEST HAND

High Card

Three unrelated cards — no matching ranks, no flush, no run. Your hand's strength depends solely on the highest individual card.

Example: 3♦ 7♠ J♣ — evaluated as "Jack-high"

Statistical Odds: 74.39% — by far the most frequent outcome at any Tiger Club table

Tiger Club Play: Anything below 10-high should be folded immediately on Tiger Club. The only High Card worth a cautious blind continuation is A-K-J or better.

Tiger Club-Specific Ranking Rules

  • A-2-3 tops the sequence ladder — Inside Tiger Club, Ace-Two-Three outranks every other sequence including Q-K-A and K-A-2
  • Triple Aces reign supreme — A-A-A defeats every other Trail combination, including K-K-K, on Tiger Club tables
  • Ties within the same hand type are broken by comparing card ranks from highest to lowest. Perfectly identical hands result in a split pot

Rapid-Fire Action Guide for Tiger Club Tables

Trail / Pure Sequence: Stay blind to pressure seen players into doubling their bets. These hands dominate showdowns on Tiger Club — let opponents build the pot for you before revealing.
Sequence / Color: Worthwhile hands that justify looking at your cards. Maintain steady bets on Tiger Club, but pay attention to opponents who stay unusually calm — silent confidence often signals a monster hand.
Pair: The swing category on Tiger Club. Premium pairs (Aces through Kings) call for bold play; weaker pairs (6s and below) demand restraint. Leverage sideshows to thin the competition before increasing your risk.
High Card: Statistically the weakest draw on Tiger Club. Exit the round early unless you're deliberately applying blind pressure for the first couple of turns. Any seen High Card below 10 is an instant fold — no exceptions.