Tag Archives: card counters

Blackjack- The Game With The Best Odds

Blackjack is by far the most popular card game in modern casinos across Europe and North America. It is played with one, two, four, six or eight decks of cards and is the most popular casino card game in American casinos. Also, it can be found in every casino the world over. Blackjack is a very social game, so it pays to know a little blackjack etiquette when playing. This game is one of the best games to play in a casino, because depending on the rules the house edge is often as low as 0.
This is the casino game which demands the most skill and strategic thinking from players, and it has several similarities with poker. The objective of Blackjack is to accumulate cards with a total value as close to 21 as possible without going over 21.
The casinos would like you to believe that card counting is illegal, immoral, and fattening, but the fact is that card counters are simply using a greater level of skill than the typical blackjack player. Players are routinely “barred”, usually by being asked to leave or by being told that they are welcome to play any game other than blackjack. Unlike many other casino games, skillful play in blackjack allows the player to gain a slight advantage over the casino. When playing blackjack, the “correct” strategy to use will depend on the number of card decks used and on the particular “house rules” that are in effect during play.
Card counters face the additional problem that the count is less volatile with multiple decks and hence offers less frequent opportunities for large favorable bets. Cards are dealt from a deck of cards called a shoe.
Before you begin playing blackjack online, it is important that you understand the odds and strategies that could possibly help you win. Know what the odds are for hitting a 10 or even a blackjack. Knowing this can help win you a round and some money. Keep in mind that when you play against the house in traditional blackjack, the odds are a bit different.
In order to find out the odds and the many ways you can understand your hand and the most likely hands of others, you can study charts. There are many resources and information about chart reading for odds on blackjack hands. Online blackjack works just great for any player with a basic card counting skill. There are many blackjack charts which reveal what you have and what the value if each hand is and there are charts which reveal what the dealer may be holding. This is valuable information that cannot be replaced. Memorize it, play often, and be successful.
Single deck blackjack is usually better than multiple deck blackjack for card counters, basic strategists, and the clueless. Blackjack is the name of one of the winning combination of cards, as well as the name of the game. It is a game of probability, and each dealt card reveals valuable information about the remaining cards. Blackjack is by far the most popular casino table game in the United States, with more players than craps, roulette, and baccarat combined. It has also become one of the most popular casino games in the world.

How the Griffin Agency was Born (Page 1 of 2)

Every card counter quickly learns about the dreaded Griffin books. Initially, it was just a single book. Now, in its fifth “volume,” the Griffin books are a virtual library of photos and information about professional casino gamblers. In fact, the mug books of card counters’ photos that are published by Griffn Investigations in Las Vegas have become so well known among professional blackjack players that they often don’t even use the proper name when referring to them. One counter might ask another, “Are you in the book?” And the other will immediately know what he’s talking about.

The book.

An annoyance for every advantage player.

To be fair, it’s not all card counters’ photos. There are some actual cheaters and thieves, purse-snatchers, and slot machine “sluggers” in the Griffin books. But it’s more card counters than any other category, and for a good reason. There just aren’t very many real crooks in the casinos. And casinos aren’t scared of purse-snatchers. The security guards will take care of them. The casinos fear the players who can blend into the crowd and legally take money from their gaming tables simply by playing with intelligence.

Intelligence is not a trait any casino is looking for in its customers. And the Griffin books are essentially mug books of the intelligent players, the customers the casinos definitely do not want playing their games.

But where did “the books” come from? How did the concept originate? Most counters today have no idea. It seems the Griffin books have been around for as long as card counting itself.

Well, almost. . .

The timing of their arrival was perfect.

It was 1967 when a young Las Vegas private detective, Robert Griffin, first got the idea for the books that have plagued card counters now for almost thirty years. Ed Thorp’s Beat the Dealer had just gone into its second (1966) edition, and the casinos were frantic to find an answer to the growing problem of getting rid of this new crop of professional players.

They had tried changing the rules of blackjack in 1963, but it didn’t work. Their main consultant, John Scarne, was valiantly trying to convince the public that Thorp’s system was a fake and that card counting didn’t work, but the public wasn’t buying it. In fact, it was ruining Scarne’s reputation as a player advocate, which he clearly no longer was.

So, throughout 1964 and 1965, Scarne began advising the Las Vegas casinos to stop dealing single-deck games and start dealing blackjack from four-deck shoes, which he believed would be far more difficult for card counters to keep track of. At the same time, Scarne was warning players that the single-deck blackjack games were too “dangerous” for players because skilled card mechanics could cheat too easily in a hand-held game.

Many of the Las Vegas casinos did, in fact, switch from single-deck games to four-deck shoes. And it was nearly impossible for any player to use Thorp’s ten-count in a shoe game. But when Thorp’s 1966 edition of Beat the Dealer came out, with the new Hi-Lo counting system that could be used to count cards with any number of deck, the casinos knew they were in trouble. Thorp was not letting up-more and morel books and counting systems were being sold, and John Scarne had no solution.