Drinks are free when you continue gambling in the same place right? i mean if i play blackjack and stay there the drinks are free as long as you tip the waitresses??
They are free regardless of whether or not you tip, but I guarantee you get your drink much quicker if you tip. If you tip well the drink is better and it comes faster.
Drinks are free even if you don't tip them.
But everybody has to make a living, right?
Bad Tipping = Bad Karma.
Yes. At least a Dollar (2 if you want them to come back more often!).
The drinks you get for free are small and not as strong as ones you pay for at the bar, but they are free and they will keep coming. Tipping does help it come quicker and more often. I have ordered Pina Coladas even, so I guess you can get most things.
Drinks are free as long as you are playing and yuoa re tipping if you dont tip you wont get served again. Here is all you need to know about free drinks in vegas
http://vegasuncovered.wordpress.com/2008…
Drinks never free! must be gambling! Tipping ain't free either!
Ordering depends on what your wasting your money on.
Like $500 bets might get you the good stuff.
While the $1 bets get you the watered down cheap stuff.
Tip the waitresses and drinks are free in las vegas casinos?
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Winning at the game of blackjack is not so difficult or impossible. all it really takes is an understanding of basic blackjack strategy to know the best calculated times to stand, hit or surrender as well as an ability to keep track of the card count and knowing how to bet. above all, good money management skills and patience are golden.
You must treat blackjack as a job and not so much as a game if you want to win money. Don’t be foolish and don’t be greedy. many players lose all their money because they get greedy with their bets or they are in too much a hurry to win everything back. this happens especially at casinos where people become intoxicated and exhausted from hours of play and drink. Remember to bet small and be patient. Unless you have a huge bank, it’s not a wise idea to keep doubling your bets after a loss.
Before going to another casino it is imperative to know the basic strategy for blackjack. Knowing this alone will drop the house’s advantage to .44% above the player’s. The basic strategy for blackjack tells you the best choice for hitting, standing, doubling and surrendering against whatever cards the house has.
Just playing with the basic strategy will make the game much more fair for you. however to actually win money and know when to set down big bets you need to learn to count cards. Card counting in blackjack has the potential of increasing the player’s advantage well above that of the dealer. Player’s benefit from high cards and dealer’s benefit from low cards because they have to worry about busting. So knowing the probability of getting a low or high card is very important.
In counting cards simply remember that you start at zero and are always counting by one. Cards 2-6 have the value +1 and cards 10-Ace have the value -1. Cards 7-9 are neutral and have the value zero. as the hands are dealt, you start counting. you want to make higher bets when the count is very high (meaning a lot of low cards have been dealt, making the likelihood of dealing high cards on the next round increases).
You can find a copy of the basic blackjack strategy chart at LetsWinCasinoBlackjack.blogspot.com [http://letswincasinoblackjack.blogspot.com]. I suggest printing it out to keep with you when gambling online or at the casino.
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I've known how to play blackjack for years but I never got into it until like a couple weeks ago. Ive been researching about card counting and I was just wondering when I should make big bets. The casino works with 6 decks and I understand that 2-6 is +1 and 10-Ace is -1……so should I wait until 3 or 4 decks of cards have been dealt and then make bigger bets if the count is good? or should I start betting higher as soon as the count is a +?
Ya .. might have it backwords there… small cards are a – big are + you want to bet in a – situation. The fewer smaller cards in the deck the better ( 4 U )… Dealer has less chance of getting a 17.
You playing a 6 deck shoe… played 2/3 of the way.. the count is – 15 or better.. Time to rock.. ( In my book )
There is SO much to answering this question correctly. You aren't going to learn what you need to learn from this forum. it depends on your count. it depends on how deep you are into the shoe. it depends on your bankroll. to do card counting right, you really need to read a book thoroughly and study a lot until you've got everything down cold. It's not a simple thing to count cards correctly.
mr.longshot has it backwards, by the way. You were correct in saying that you start thinking of making larger bets with a plus count, not a minus. (Unless he has some sort of system that's backwards from all the other systems out there. perhaps every time a low card comes out, he calls that -1. Again, that would be different from just about everyone on the planet.
When you are card counting the regular way, when should you start making big bets (blackjack)?
Are such events truly an indicator that the player has the edge over the house at that moment? Generally, no—they have zero impact on the house edge. It doesn’t matter how you arrived at the decision, because luck will determine the outcome, and math determines the house edge.
Casino players are forever trying to figure out the most advantageous time to place their wagers.
Should I wait for two blacks to appear before I bet red, since red would then be due? Or should I wait for two blacks to appear in row, and then try to ride that hot streak? if numbers appear in one column on the roulette layout, should I bet that column or jump to a different column?
These scenarios which prompt players to change up their bets are known as “qualifying events.” As there are many different types of players and styles of play, there are countless qualifying events that are used to determine the appropriate time to risk money on Lady Luck’s largesse. but let’s not kid ourselves—this manner of betting is mostly based on hoping to get lucky.
Are such events truly an indicator that the player has the edge over the house at that moment? Generally, no—they have zero impact on the house edge. It doesn’t matter how you arrived at the decision, because luck will determine the outcome, and math determines the house edge.
Still, there is one thing these qualifying events tend to have in common: they slow down the total number of wagers the players make, and thus using such events will slow down their rate of loss—even though the house edge remains the same.
Now let’s take a look at some methods players use for qualifying when and how to bet. with many games, players use a trend-betting system. if two, three or more of the same event occurs, they will bet on that same event continuing, or against it. You see this in the roulette examples I gave above, but variations of this happen all the time at the blackjack tables, and with other card games as well.
In a blackjack game, if the dealer busts once or twice or three times in a row, you might jump into the game figuring he will bust again. this is called following a positive trend. Conversely, if you’ve just watched him beat all the players three hands in a row, you might place a large bet with the assumption that he’s “due to bust.” You might also decide to raise or lower your bets as you play, based on such trends as high cards coming out together, low cards coming out together, a the dealer getting two blackjacks in a row, the dealer getting two hands of 20 in a row…and so on.
In baccarat, Pai Gow poker, Caribbean Stud, Let It Ride, Three-Card poker and many of the other “carnival games,” you can sit out hands and use a trend-betting system to determine when to jump into the fray. There is no rule that says you have to play each and every hand. during a game, you can also raise your bet if you have won several hands in a row, or lower your bet if you’ve lost several hands in a row.
Of course, you can also lower your bet in response to winning several hands in a row if you figure your little hot streak is due to end—or raise your bet after a few consecutive losses, figuring the tide has to turn.
At craps, there are a wide variety of qualifying events that you can use to decide which numbers or propositions to wager. if several Crazy Crapper bets such as the 2, 3, 11, or 12 have been rolled, you can jump on this trend if you feel those numbers are getting hot. You can decide to bet multi-bet Crazy Crapper bets such as the Whirl, the Horn, or the C&E, if such groups of numbers seem to be showing a lot.
Many players like the shooter to make a point before they bet. some take the bull by the horns and ask the dealers before cashing in, “Is this table hot or cold?” if the dealer says, “Hot,” the player jumps in figuring the table will stay hot—or he can choose not to jump in, figuring the table won’t stay hot much longer.
To me, the best qualifying event in the game of craps is called the Captain’s 5-Count, a method used to determine which shooters to bet on and which shooters not to bet on. It’s a strictly mechanical method that doesn’t require any thought. When a shooter gets past the 5-Count, you bet. You don’t have to fret over whether the table is currently hot, or cold, or due for a change. Interestingly enough, the 5-Count will reduce the number of random rolls a player bets on by a whopping 57 percent—a nice money saver.
Card counters at blackjack use a simple formula to determine when to raise and lower their bets. if the game favors them at a given moment, depending on which cards have been played, the card counter bets more. if the game favors the house at that moment, they bet less. this is the only qualifying system that actually works to give the player the edge.
Otherwise, there’s really no science behind qualifying events. They won’t change the odds of the game, or influence the next roll of the dice or turn of the cards. but trying to spot patterns and capitalize on them can inject some extra excitement, and winning is even more fun when one of your predictions pans out.
Frank Scoblete’s newest book is Casino Craps: Shoot to Win!, which can take you from novice to dice controller. It comes with a DVD showing unedited controlled throws. Meanwhile, Scoblete’s Beat Blackjack now! takes you from novice to advantage player with the easiest advantage-play method ever created. They’re available at Amazon.com; your favorite bookstore; or by mail-order by calling 1-800-944-0406. Want a free brochure, too? Just call the above number.
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I'm going to Vegas in two weeks. my favorite game to play is let It Ride, I've played it on a couple of cruises and won quite a bit. there are a lot of sites that show the optimal playing strategy, like what hands to let it ride on, as well as odds and payout tables. I understand the house edge is about 3.5% with optimal playing strategy. But what I would like to know, is there a betting strategy for let It Ride? I don't think any of the Blackjack ones would work like increasing bets every time you win or lose a hand, since in let It Ride you win less than 1 out of 4 hands on average. does anyone know of any betting strategies for this game that can produce higher payouts? Line when to increase or decrease the bet size?