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- BLACKJACK - POKER - ROULETTE - MACHINES A SOUS -
BlackJack begins after the following ritual is
completed: the dealer shuffles the cards, the deck is "cut" by
a player using the marker card, and the dealer "burns" a card.
Before any cards are dealt, the players may make a wager by placing
the desired chips (value and number) into the betting box. Occasionally
a player may sit out a hand or two for various reasons.
The numerical values of the cards are: (10, J, Q, K)
= 10 ; (Ace) = 1 or 11 ; (other cards) = face value (3 = 3). Since
a casino can be very noisy, hand signals are usually the preferred
method of signalling hit, stand, etc.
The rules the dealer must play by are very simple. If the dealer's
hand is 16 or less, he/she must take a card. If the dealer's hand
is 17 or more, he/she must stand. Note that some casinos allow
the dealer to hit on soft 17 which gives the house a very small
additional advantage.The dealer's strategy is fixed and what you
and the other players have is immaterial to him/her as far as
hitting and standing is concerned. The player can do most anything
he/she wants as far as hitting and standing goes. Should a player
get a BlackJack (first 2 cards are an Ace and a ten) the payoff
is 150% more than the original bet ie, bet $10.00 and the payoff
is $15.00. Doubling down is restricted to 2-card hands, usually
totalling 9, 10, or 11 although some casinos allow doubling down
on any 2-card hand. If your first two cards provide you with the
appropriate total and your cards were dealt face down, turn them
over and put them on the dealer's side of the betting square.
If your first two cards provide you with the appropriate total
and your cards were dealt face up, point to them and say "double"
when the dealer prompts you for a card and simultaneously put
an equal amount of chips next to (not on top of) those already
in the betting box. The dealer will give you one more card only,
then he/she will move on to the next hand. If you have a pair
that you want to split and your cards are dealt face down, turn
them over and place them a few inches apart. If your cards were
dealt face up, point to your cards and say "split" when the dealer
prompts you for a card. The original bet will go with one card
and you will have to place an equal amount of chips in the betting
box near the other card. You are now playing two hands, each as
though they were regular hands with the exception being that if
you have just split two aces. In that case, you only get one card
which will hopefully be a 10. If it is a ten, that hand's total
is now 21 but the hand isn't considered a BlackJack. That is,
you are paid 1:1 and not 1:1.5 as for a natural (BlackJack). Combined
example of above two plays: Say you are dealt two fives. You split
them. The next card Top of Page is another 5 and you re-split
them. Three hands have grown out of one and you are now in for
three times your original bet. But wait. Say the next card is
a six. So one hand is a 5,6 which gives you eleven; another just
has a 5 and the other hand has a 5. You decide to double down
on the first hand. You are dealt a 7 giving 18 which you stand
on. Now a ten is dealt for the second hand and you decide to stay
at 15. The last hand is the lonely third 5, which is dealt a four
for a total of nine. You decide to double down and get an eight
giving that hand a total of 17. You started with a twenty dollar
bet and now you are in for a hundred! Better hope the dealer doesn't
end up with a hand more than 18 lest you lose a C-note. It was
dangerous to split two fives because you are replacing a hand
that is great for drawing on or doubling down on, by what will
probably be two poor hands. Insurance comes into play when the
dealer's up card is an Ace. At this point all the players have
two cards The dealer does not check his/her hole card before asking
the players if they want insurance, as the dealer can't give away
the value of the hole card if the dealer doesn't know what the
hole card is. If a player wants insurance, half the original amount
bet is placed on the semicircle labeled "insurance" which is printed
on the table. If the dealer has a BlackJack the player wins the
side bet (the insurance bet) but loses the original bet, thus
providing no net loss or gain since insurance pays 2 to 1. If
the dealer does not have a BlackJack, the side bet is lost and
the hand is played normally. If you are not counting cards, don't
bother with insurance. The proper Basic Strategy play is to decline.
The time to take insurance is when the number of non-tens to tens
drops below a 2 to 1 margin since insurance pays 2 to 1.
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