Understanding Capsa Susun Rules and Hand Ranking
Capsa Susun uses a standard 52-card deck. Each player receives 13 cards and must arrange them into three separate hands: a five-card high hand, a five-card middle hand, and a three-card low hand. The ranking system follows poker hand values—royal flush, straight flush, four of a kind, full house, flush, straight, three of a kind, two pair, one pair, and high card. Your low hand (three cards) ranks by high card only, since three-card poker hands do not include straights or flushes.
The objective is to beat your opponents' corresponding hands. If your high hand beats their high hand, your middle beats their middle, and your low beats their low, you win the round. If you lose on any hand, the round goes to your opponent. Ties on individual hands result in a push—neither player wins that hand. Many Capsa Susun tables on maha jitu use a "win two of three" rule, meaning you must win at least two of the three hands to claim the pot.
Hand arrangement is final
Once you lock in your three hands, you cannot change them. Strategy revolves around deciding which cards go into which hand before you commit.
On maha jitu, our Capsa Susun tables display your 13 cards on screen, and you drag or tap each card into the high, middle, or low zone. The interface shows your current hand strength in real time—for example, if you have a pair in your high hand, the platform highlights it. Once all players have arranged their cards, the dealer reveals hands and calculates winners instantly.
How to arrange your cards
Start by identifying your strongest five-card combination for the high hand. Next, build your middle hand from the remaining eight cards—aim for a strong pair or two pair. Finally, use your last three cards for the low hand, which typically needs only a high card or a pair.
Experienced players balance their hands so that no single hand is too weak. If you put all your strength into your high hand, your middle and low hands may lose, costing you the round.
Deposit and Account Setup on maha jitu
To play Capsa Susun on maha jitu, you first create an account and complete identity verification. We ask for your name, date of birth, phone number, and email. Once you submit these details, our system cross-checks them with Indonesian national records. Verification typically completes within a few hours, though peak periods may extend this window.
After verification, you can deposit. We accept DANA, e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment, and online payment e-wallets, as well as e-wallet scans that route to any major Indonesian bank. For direct bank transfers, we issue you a unique virtual-account number for mobile banking, local payment, online payment, or e-wallet. You transfer funds to that account from your bank app, and we credit your maha jitu wallet once our system confirms the deposit.
Deposit minimums and processing times vary by payment method. E-wallet deposits often clear within seconds; bank transfers may take a few minutes depending on your bank's processing speed. We do not charge deposit fees, though your bank or e-wallet provider may apply their own charges.
Payment methods we support
- E-wallets: mobile banking, local payment, online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking
- local payment: Unified QR-code payment across all banks
- Bank transfers: online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment virtual accounts
Playing Capsa Susun Tables
Once your account is funded, you navigate to the Card Games section on maha jitu and select a Capsa Susun table. Tables are grouped by stake level—low, medium, and high—so you can choose a table that matches your deposit amount and comfort level. Each table shows the current players, the pot size, and the number of rounds in progress.
You join a table by clicking "Take Seat." The game waits for all players to be ready, then deals 13 cards to each. You have a set time window (typically 60–90 seconds) to arrange your cards. Once the timer expires, the system locks your hand and moves to the next player. When all players have locked their hands, the dealer reveals them, compares the three hands, and distributes the pot.
Winnings are credited to your maha jitu wallet instantly. You can cash out immediately or use your balance to join another table. Our platform tracks your session history—you can review past hands, your win/loss record, and your account balance at any time.
Key takeaways
- Arrange 13 cards into three poker hands: five-card high, five-card middle, three-card low
- Win by beating at least two of your opponents' three hands
- Deposit via e-wallet, mobile banking, local payment, online payment, e-wallet, mobile banking, or bank transfer
- Winnings are credited instantly to your wallet
- Verify your identity once; all future deposits and withdrawals use the same account
Withdrawal and Account Security
When you are ready to withdraw, go to your Account menu and select "Withdraw." You choose your registered payment method—the same e-wallet or bank account you used to deposit. Enter the amount, and our system verifies that your account balance covers the withdrawal and that your identity matches our records.
Withdrawals are processed to your payment method within a standard timeframe. E-wallet withdrawals typically arrive within minutes; bank transfers may take longer depending on your bank's settlement window. We do not charge withdrawal fees, though your bank or e-wallet may apply their own charges.
Account security is our priority. We encrypt all payment data, monitor for unusual activity, and require identity verification before your first withdrawal. If you suspect unauthorized access, contact our support team immediately. We offer English-language support via live chat and email during standard business hours.
Capsa Susun Strategy Notes
Capsa Susun strategy centres on hand balance and card reading. Since you see only your own 13 cards, you cannot know what your opponents hold. Experienced players estimate the likelihood of strong hands based on the cards they see and adjust their arrangement accordingly.
A common beginner mistake is overloading the high hand with all premium cards, leaving the middle and low hands weak. Instead, aim to win two hands decisively. For example, if you have a pair of Aces, a pair of Kings, and a pair of Queens, you might place the Aces in your high hand, the Kings in your middle hand, and the Queens in your low hand. This spreads your strength and increases your chances of winning the round.
Another consideration is position. In some Capsa Susun variants, players arrange their hands in turn order, meaning later players see earlier players' hands before committing their own. On maha jitu, all players arrange simultaneously, so position does not confer an advantage.
Winning approaches
- Balance strength across all three hands
- Aim to win two hands, not just one
- Observe opponents' play patterns over multiple rounds
Common pitfalls
- Placing all strong cards in one hand
- Ignoring the three-card low hand as unimportant
