Oasis Poker Pro Series

ProviderNetEnt
RTP99.27% - Compare RTPs

Oasis Poker Pro Series is a table game developed by NetEnt, built on the structure of Caribbean Stud Poker with one key addition: the ability to exchange cards before you commit to a raise or fold. That single mechanic changes the feel of the game considerably, giving you a meaningful extra decision on every hand.

What Is Oasis Poker?

Caribbean Stud Poker is a house-banked casino poker variant where you play your five-card hand against the dealer rather than against other players. Oasis Poker keeps all those rules intact and adds a card-swap option. Before you decide whether to raise or fold, you can pay a fee to replace one or more cards in your hand.

The game originated in land-based casinos across Eastern Europe and North Africa before moving online. The Pro Series label refers to NetEnt's premium table game presentation: cleaner interface, smoother animations, and three stake tiers - Low Limit (£0.10-£5), Standard (£1-£40), and High Limit (£25-£500). The core rules are identical across all three.

How a Hand Works

Each round starts with an ante bet. Both you and the dealer receive five cards. One of the dealer's cards is turned face up - this is the information you use to guide your decisions throughout the hand.

Before you act, you have the option to exchange cards. You choose which cards to swap and pay a fee based on how many you want to replace:

  • One card - costs 1x your ante
  • Two cards - costs 2x your ante
  • Three cards - costs 3x your ante
  • Four cards - costs 2x your ante
  • Five cards - costs 1x your ante (but you must then raise)

After any exchanges, you decide whether to raise or fold. Raising requires a call bet of exactly 2x your ante. If you fold, you lose the ante and any exchange fees paid. If you raise, the dealer reveals their hand.

The dealer must hold at least Ace-King to qualify. If they do not qualify, you win even money on the ante and the call bet is returned as a push. If the dealer qualifies and beats your hand, you lose both bets. If you beat the dealer, the ante pays even money and the call bet pays according to the paytable.

Payout Table

The call bet pays based on your winning hand:

  • Royal Flush - 100:1
  • Straight Flush - 50:1
  • Four of a Kind - 20:1
  • Full House - 7:1
  • Flush - 5:1
  • Straight - 4:1
  • Three of a Kind - 3:1
  • Two Pair - 2:1
  • One Pair or better - 1:1

The house edge under standard rules sits at 1.04% of the initial ante, which works out to roughly 0.47% of total money wagered when you account for the call bets made through a session. The RTP stands at 99.27%, which compares favourably to Caribbean Stud Poker at around 97.42%.

Card Exchange Strategy

The card swap option sounds appealing but costs money each time you use it, so disciplined use matters. The general framework is to exchange only when the draw meaningfully improves your expected hand value - and even then, only one card at a time in most situations.

Swap one card when you hold any of these:

  • Four cards to a royal flush or straight flush (hand is not already a straight or flush)
  • Four cards to a flush with no pair
  • Four cards to an open-ended straight with no pair

Do not exchange when you already hold two pair, three of a kind, or any made hand. The cost of swapping rarely justifies giving up a hand you would raise with anyway. Exchanging two or more cards in a single hand is almost never correct - the fee escalates and the improvement in expected value rarely keeps up.

A simplified raise/fold rule after any exchange: raise with Ace-King-Jack-8-3 or better. Following this simple strategy produces a house edge approximately 0.1% above the mathematical optimum, which is a reasonable trade-off for most players.

After any exchange, the raise/fold decision follows the same logic as Caribbean Stud: raise with a pair or better, and raise when you hold Ace-King and the dealer's exposed card is a 2 through Queen that matches one of your non-Ace cards. Fold everything else.

NetEnt's Pro Series Presentation

NetEnt built the Pro Series range for players who want a clear, uncluttered interface. The table layout puts hand rankings on screen at all times, which is useful if you are still learning which hand beats which. Card animations run smoothly and betting controls respond quickly.

Betting limits across the three Pro Series tables give the game meaningful range. The Low Limit table works for casual sessions; the High Limit version suits players who want flexibility on stake size up to £500 per hand. Mobile play works through the browser without requiring a separate app - the interface scales well to smaller screens.

How It Compares to Other Table Games

Oasis Poker sits in an interesting spot between video poker and Caribbean Stud. It has lower variance than slots and a house edge comparable to Blackjack Professional Series when played with a reasonable strategy. You are not trying to build the perfect hand in isolation as you would in video poker - you are always playing against the dealer, which adds a different kind of tension to the exchange decision.

The game suits players who enjoy poker hand rankings and want some strategic input without the complexity of full table poker against other players. Compared to Baccarat Pro Series, Oasis Poker gives you considerably more decision points per hand. The card swap adds a layer that pure Caribbean Stud does not have, and it rewards players who understand when the swap is worth paying for.

You can find Oasis Poker Pro Series at NetEnt-powered online casinos alongside the rest of NetEnt's table game catalogue.

Where to Play Oasis Poker Pro Series

These online casinos carry NetEnt games including Oasis Poker Pro Series. Read our Donbet review or browse all casino reviews.

Oasis Poker Pro Series RTP and Variance

Oasis Poker Pro Series has an RTP of 99.27%, which is well above average. See our highest RTP slots for the best returning games.

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