Yeah, back in the day, more than once per night some bozo would call 'Follow the Queen's Baseball with deuces and one-eyed Jacks wild". Half the time it was 7-card no-peek.
Which meant 2s, 3s, 9s, one-eyed Jacks, and (usually) whatever card followed the last Queen were wild.... and a 4 got you an extra card. FFS....
Almost all winning hands were quads or better (usually quints), and the biggest area of contention was whether or not 5 wild cards were an actual hand, or totally valueless since they weren't paired with an actual value card (aka 'a wild card has no rank'). And for some 7-card hand games, they actually used the 6th and 7th cards as tiebreakers.
And the 5-of-a-kind vs straight flush argument was usually moot, too. Any hand with four wild cards plus any Ten through Ace could be a Royal Flush -- meaning only those hands with four wilds that contained an actual Ace could be five Aces. Clear winner in the high-hand argument.
For those interested, US silver coins (10c, 25c, 50c) were the 'casino currency' for those games. No pennies, nickels, or paper allowed.