CASINOS
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Home Play Video Blackjack Versus the Real Deal
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Dear Mark, I use a Blackjack game on my home PC
to practice before going to the casino, where I like to play video blackjack. I
have set the blackjack game on my PC to the same rules (I think) that the video
game in the casino plays by. BUT, it seems that although I do well on my home
practice sessions, I get my clock cleaned on the video games in the casino. Why
do you feel I win at home but not in the casino? Robin B. Let¹s
begin, Robin, with what you are doing right: using a computer to acquire gaming
skills without the expense of a live or video blackjack game. The benefit of
computer training is the ability to practice perfect basic strategy, test
card-counting strategies, and examine money-management progressive-win formulas
at no financial risk. A computer will also accumulate data for later review,
enabling you to spot costly trends that you can avoid when playing the "real
deal." Any knowledge obtained without a cash outlay "should" make you more
money down the road. Albeit "should" is the operative word here, let¹s
examine why your computer practice still might not bring legal tender dancing
into your wallet. First, when risking hard-earned money at the casino, your
decisions may be less confident than those you make when playing with free
"computer credits." When betting dollars versus donuts, many players tend to
make careless moves like not hitting a 16 against a six, forgetting to split
your 8s against a dealer¹s 5, or failing to double down or split hands in
favorable circumstances. Also, you might be playing more hands per hour in
the casino than on your computer. With any game that has a built-in advantage,
and a video blackjack machine in the casino does, the more hands you play, the
more the machine will chip away at your bankroll. We also need to talk
about your gambling timeline. Your duration of play, both with your computer
and in a casino, is far too condensed to determine if one method is better than
another. It is not anomalous to have 10 winning sessions at home and 20 losing
sessions in the casino. Finally, the rules of the video blackjack game the
casino provides might have one slight variation that can turn a winning visit
into a losing one. For example, most casino video blackjack machines pay
even money on natural 21s instead of the true value of a blackjack (3 for 2).
Because you can expect a blackjack every 21 hands, the loss of that bonus will
cost you an additional 2.3 percent. Considering that blackjack has a house
advantage of less than .5 percent to a knowledgeable player - possibly, another
problem you have - your losses might very well be tied to this perfidious rule
change. Also, Robin, be weary of machines that round down blackjack payoffs. If
you do happen to find a machine that pays the bonus for a blackjack, make
wagers in even amounts so you can get the maximum value of a blackjack (a
payoff of £3 for every £2 wagered). Quiz: and what will a
single pound wagered get you for a blackjack? Just a quid, so always bet in
two-unit increments.
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