Who can count? <not excatly illegal activities>
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- The Yosemite Bear
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Who can count? <not excatly illegal activities>
alothough likely to get you banned from casino's who understands the basics of legal cheating/playing aware. Or basic card counting, and proper blackjack playing?
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- RedImperator
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Basically, in card counting, each card has a positive or negative point value. In the easiest system, low cards are worth +1, high cards -1, and medium cards 0 (aces are treated differently by different systems and usually have to be tracked separately). After every hand, the players looks at all the cards on the table and adds their point value together. As the deck gets lower, a positive total will tell the player there are a lot of tens and face cards left, and so his odds of winning are going up (they're going up for everybody, but only the card counter is aware of it).
The casinos, being allowed to rig virtually all the games to favor the house, ply their patrons with alcohol, provide a loud and distracting environment for the players, and reshuffle the decks any time they want for any reason, are naturally enraged at the thought of a player committing the terrible crime of remembering which cards have been dealt and using that knowledge to slice away an infitesimal amount of the casino's earnings, and in Nevada, they reserve the right to ban a player for life for being too good at blackjack. New Jersey doesn't let them get away with that bullshit, but they can reshuffle the deck anytime they like to throw off a counter.
The casinos, being allowed to rig virtually all the games to favor the house, ply their patrons with alcohol, provide a loud and distracting environment for the players, and reshuffle the decks any time they want for any reason, are naturally enraged at the thought of a player committing the terrible crime of remembering which cards have been dealt and using that knowledge to slice away an infitesimal amount of the casino's earnings, and in Nevada, they reserve the right to ban a player for life for being too good at blackjack. New Jersey doesn't let them get away with that bullshit, but they can reshuffle the deck anytime they like to throw off a counter.
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
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- Jalinth
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Also, to really get the odds in your favour, you need to shift your bets (generally from min to max and then back) with the odds. Doing this is pretty much telling the Casino - "I'm a card counter". Doing this coupled with accurate card counting can give you the end and not the house.RedImperator wrote:Basically, in card counting, each card has a positive or negative point value. In the easiest system, low cards are worth +1, high cards -1, and medium cards 0 (aces are treated differently by different systems and usually have to be tracked separately). After every hand, the players looks at all the cards on the table and adds their point value together. As the deck gets lower, a positive total will tell the player there are a lot of tens and face cards left, and so his odds of winning are going up (they're going up for everybody, but only the card counter is aware of it).
The casinos, being allowed to rig virtually all the games to favor the house, ply their patrons with alcohol, provide a loud and distracting environment for the players, and reshuffle the decks any time they want for any reason, are naturally enraged at the thought of a player committing the terrible crime of remembering which cards have been dealt and using that knowledge to slice away an infitesimal amount of the casino's earnings, and in Nevada, they reserve the right to ban a player for life for being too good at blackjack. New Jersey doesn't let them get away with that bullshit, but they can reshuffle the deck anytime they like to throw off a counter.
Problems
1) Vegas generally uses 6 decks - hard to count
2) They reshuffle 1/2 to 3/4 of the way through and can do it at any time
3) If you are successful, they will ban you and give your picture to other casinos.
The successful ones I've read about were a group of Math PhD (post-doc primarily) who broke the card counting into different roles. One guy plays minimums (counts cards), second guy is the big spender - shows up and bets heavily (but only when signalled) - other people are also involved - either to distract or signal.
Until someone talked, they were very successful (casinos never caught on)
- RedImperator
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There's a book out about the whole MIT blackjack team. It's some really fascinating stuff. The way they did it probably borders on cheating more than straight up card-counting, but still, it was great stuff.
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
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