winbig
Keep winning this amount.
- Joined
- Mar 10, 2005
- Location
- Pennsylvania
He has my vote.
Mine too. He has now achieved "nothing but crap" status. Hover your mouse over the red blocks
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He has my vote.
I would say I win more than i lose at blackjack, sometimes I double up, sometimes I bust the bankroll. I go into a casino with a gambling budget. As soon as i walk in the doors I consider it lost. If I win great, if I lose, no big deal, I just head for the bar
Thanks for your reply, it would be fun to know if you would do the same in online gambling. I have also seen some incredible cards in real casinoes, especially when changing dealer, LOL. On the other hand, going for the bar in an excellent tactic!
Question : Is there any statistical gain to increasing or lowering bets online? I would assume that each new deal is automatically resuffled so I cant imagine there being any gains other than having a lucky run at the right time.
Hi All,
You're right, Many casinos cheat.
After all, casinos relate to our greed, they try to buy us with their bonuses,
and make us not read the fine prints.
But good casinos are measured by a good support team, fairness and honesty.
It's very stupid of them to lose good players because of their cheating and they always get hurt and lose money in the long run.
We should only stick to the good casinos.
Sam David
Global Player was added to that list years ago. At the time Global Player was added, it used its own proprietary software and did not offer blackjack with an expected player edge. Now Global Player uses a different software (Boss Media) and offers different games.Look what I just found: It seems that many players met losses far below the statistical average, at GLOBAL PLAYER.
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For me the fact that they provide single deck blackjack (with particular house rules) where the player can have an edge, is of itself a little suspicious.
I expect that games are similar between different casinos using the software, and it would be difficult to add a program on top of the software that would modify game decisions. I've never heard of a case in which a software was unfair at one casino, but fair elsewhere.Suppose Boss Media provides completelly fair software (which I doubt that too). Are you saying that none of the casinos using Boss Media sotware, are cheating, because they are under the full supervision of Boss Media? Or because it is impossible to add a program on the initial program of Boss Media?
I am not implying anything, I am just asking.
Suppose Boss Media provides completelly fair software (which I doubt that too). Are you saying that none of the casinos using Boss Media sotware, are cheating, because they are under the full supervision of Boss Media? Or because it is impossible to add a program on the initial program of Boss Media?
I am not implying anything, I am just asking.
"... there are sites using rogue software that must be exposed. I list some of which I am aware on my On-Line Casino Blacklist. I had read a couple of his warnings with particular interest. One warning concerned a company offering the chance to establish your own casino. Its advert reveals a nasty can of worms:
Our proprietary random number generator is calculating profit before the winning /loosing (sic) number is sent back to the game. You can set a minimum profit thats always kept for you. This also ensures that you will not wake up with $20,000 debts!
This same company boasts on its own site:
The software is very good, with great control over the profit/winnings. It has the ability to change the winning % per game/table in real-time. Also you can withdraw the profit and limit player's winnings. Games are completely random, if the winning is within the limit. If the bet is causing winning over the set limit, the generator is generating another number until the winning is within the limit (or player loses).
Note the words in italics! This is precisely the experience I have suffered. Having been encouraged by winning, suddenly whatever I do is wrong. I road-tested the game to (my) destruction. Having started playing even chance positions (18 numbers) and losing whatever chance I backed, I kept on increasing the numbers played till I was playing thirty-three a spin. The four other numbers kept hitting! I was then cleaned out. My experience was a precise fit with the boasted ability of the software. ..."
Michael Shackleford (You do not have permission to view link Log in or register now.)
I lost my whole of deposited money which was 198. But even if I had more in my account, the application of the risk of ruin probability was correct.
When one stops counting his stats at the lowest point of his currect bankroll, HE CAN use the risk of ruin probability to find what was the probability that could happen. And all that based on the number of hands.
I site the theoretical considerations that support this, at:https://www.casinomeister.com/forums/threads/vc-casino-fair-bj.14540/
.
Suppose a player plays 5000 hands in blackjack, and places 1$ on each hand.
What is the average lowest point a player's bankroll will reach, during the course of these 5000 hands?
Or, in other words, what is the average greatest loss a player will meet during a course of 5000 hands?
(this could be, e.g. -100$)
Suppose that the bankroll is infinite.
(I am not talking about the average loss at the end of the 5000 hands)
I want the whole procedure which gives the result.
Do you know any math-blackjack forums I can ask this?
Always flatbetting 1$, basic strategy, reshuffle after every hand.
Player 1, ends up with a balance of -40$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -150$ at hand No 3524
Player 2, ends up with a balance of -15$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -70$ at hand No 2026
Player 3, ends up with a balance of +17$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -65$ at hand No 3730
... and so on. So when the number of players-samples tends to infinity, the values of the ending balances tend to an average value, and the values of these lowest points tend to another average value.
So how can we find the average value for this lowest point?
I am NOT asking how probable it is for the ending balance (after the completion of the 5000 hands) to deviate that much or that much from the average value of the ending balance.
I think these are two different things.
My problem has the condition that 5000 hands must be completed.
Suppose a player plays 5000 hands in blackjack, and places 1$ on each hand.
What is the average lowest point a player's bankroll will reach, during the course of these 5000 hands?
Or, in other words, what is the average greatest loss a player will meet during a course of 5000 hands?
(this could be, e.g. -100$)
Suppose that the bankroll is infinite.
(I am not talking about the average loss at the end of the 5000 hands)
I want the whole procedure which gives the result.
Do you know any math-blackjack forums I can ask this?
I mean that after the end of the 5000 hands, one might end up having lost -40$, but the greatest loss he met during these 5000 hands, was at the hand No 3524, where he was losing -150$. That's what I mean by lowest point of his bankroll during the play of the 5000 hands. So what is the average value for the lowest point? This does not refer to a loss AFTER the 5000 hands are completed. This loss corresponds to the -40$.
Always flatbetting 1$, basic strategy, reshuffle after every hand.
Player 1, ends up with a balance of -40$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -150$ at hand No 3524
Player 2, ends up with a balance of -15$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -70$ at hand No 2026
Player 3, ends up with a balance of +17$ after 5000 hands.
But the lowest point his balance reached, was -65$ at hand No 3730
... and so on. So when the number of players-samples tends to infinity, the values of the ending balances tend to an average value, and the values of these lowest points tend to another average value.
So how can we find the average value for this lowest point?
I am NOT asking how probable it is for the ending balance (after the completion of the 5000 hands) to deviate that much or that much from the average value of the ending balance.
I think these are two different things.
My problem has the condition that 5000 hands must be completed.
The Wizard Of Odds said:I have been asked several times for a general formula for other situations. Unfortunately there isn't any that I know of. Risk of ruin problems are mathematically usually very complicated. It is easier and more convincing to run a random simulation instead.