I Wonder Why???? ( Video Poker )

universexf6

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Joined
Nov 18, 2004
Location
A Country Called Full Of Geld
Hello all. Hope you are going win - win road now ;)

By the way, there is a question I have been hiding in my
secret pocket of my heart for about 2 years since I started
playing at casino.

What is actually the point when there are only cards whose number
is fewer than the "target" card when you DOUBLE at VP? You know,
it is quite a waste of time to reverse...because you will reverse only to
find the card whose number is fewer than yours and lose.

I am sorry this may sound moronic, and have to admit my country
does not have Casinos on land. and my knowledge is only equivalent
to that of 9 years old child, but wonder is wonder.

If there are only cards available whose number is fewer than yours,
then why doesn't software say to you "Hey, you don't have to reverse,
you are done already". And we can omit the time to reverse.

Hmmmm....may be did I come up with a revolutionary idea which may
cause turbulance in this industry? :lolup:

Anyway, have you never wondered about this? Curious very much.
 
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Suckers bet

I think it's a 'suckers bet'. In Microgaming, you must select a higher card, you cannot choose which direction to go in (well not that I can see). The payoff is 1x but the odds are less than 50% of winning. It's just an opportunity to increase the house edge of a VP with a low house edge. It's a bit like the Insurance and Bonus bets in Blackjack (another game with a low house edge). I certainly don't double a decent win in VP, I might double a pair for a bit of fun. I was even offered double up on a Royal Flush - I can just see that King turn over - now where is that Ace? :D
 
The odds on a double up are 50%, not less. The reason a double up is offered is because people like to double up more than once - see how often you can call the flip of a coin correctly... and as a result the house will more often than not end up with the money.

Universexf6, the short answer to your question is because the server actually does not know this when it sends the signal to the software on your computer - it only sends the value of the cards and does a check after you send your selection back!

And by the way, I have seen on a number occasions the dealer has a jack or queen, only for all the player cards to be aces or kings! So it definitely works both ways.
 
50%

It doesn't seem so with Microgaming. You can only choose higher, not colour or suit as on some. All the other cards are turned after selecting and often I find it was unwinnable, so not even 1 in 4 odds there. Even with a 4 or 5 I get rather a lot of Deuces and threes and find I have managed to find the one and only losing card. As it's pure luck I would expect to find the 'one and only' on 1 in 4 occasions, but it's more like 1 in 2 or 1 in 3 at best.
If you could choose whether to select for high or low then it would be 50/50
An experiment could be used to test this, but several hundred double up attempts are needed for a fair analysis.
 
Being able to select high or low is completely irrelevant. If the dealer has a 2 showing, you have a 48/51 chance of winning, and a 3/51 chance of tying - no chance of losing.

By the same token, if the dealer has an Ace, you have a 3/51 chance of tying - 48/51 chance of losing, and no chance of winning.

If you were given the chance to choose high or low, you would have a huge advantage - this is not Acey Deucey or Red Dog we're playing, it's Double up. Alternately, you could be given a Red/Black or Heads/Tails opportunity, which is boring as hell and not the way it's done in Vegas.
 
hi guys
i once had a royal flush at ladbrokes, i doubled up, and dealer hit a 2 :eek2: i turned my card, at worst it was a stand off.....and i hit a 3 :D but i wasnt playing max coin when i hit the royal! never play the game now without playing max coin........
 
spearmaster said:
The odds on a double up are 50%, not less. The reason a double up is offered is because people like to double up more than once - see how often you can call the flip of a coin correctly... and as a result the house will more often than not end up with the money.

Universexf6, the short answer to your question is because the server actually does not know this when it sends the signal to the software on your computer - it only sends the value of the cards and does a check after you send your selection back!

And by the way, I have seen on a number occasions the dealer has a jack or queen, only for all the player cards to be aces or kings! So it definitely works both ways.


Thank you fof reply, master. Now your point is very clear and it is always
so that receiving your reply is very fun. Anyway. please input and provide
us with information and it is always appreciated. Thanks.
 
Universexf6, you're welcome :)

Nafanny - I believe the double-up function is regulated by the Nevada Gaming Board, and *must* be random. And since just about every single video poker machine is made by IGT, they certainly would not take the risk of losing their license.

In the UK, now, that's a different story :) Talk about a rigged machine... LOL...
 
spearmaster said:
Universexf6, you're welcome :)

Nafanny - I believe the double-up function is regulated by the Nevada Gaming Board, and *must* be random. And since just about every single video poker machine is made by IGT, they certainly would not take the risk of losing their license.

In the UK, now, that's a different story :) Talk about a rigged machine... LOL...

The poker cards dealt may be random but the double up isnt IMO.

A few years back me and my mate would play 5 cent JOB and double up everything until we ended up with $100.We would play normally and at 1st the double up would be pretty much 50-50 but as we started to lose $ it would let the double up win a bit more. Once we down a far bit ($50-$100) every double up would win, win and win again. The wins from the paytable didnt increase in frequency or size but the double up would be amazing. Nearly always came off the machine with at least our money back.

We used to do this for fun and to take a break when the tables were killing us. We called it "buzzing up the 5 centers"

This was about 5-7 years ago, since they took the particular bank of JOB out we hardly play any VP in Vegas. Maybe they are random now but they were anything but on the above ones :D
 
Double-up is not, and has never been, non-random in Las Vegas as long as I've been going there (25 years). And in my case, I used to lose my ass doubling up because I was never satisfied with breaking even on a bet!

Like I said, look a little closer to home for rigged doubling... LOL... and I also used to play fun VP machines in Hong Kong and Taiwan - some of them were actually random, but most of them not... LOL...
 
spearmaster said:
Universexf6, you're welcome :)

Nafanny - I believe the double-up function is regulated by the Nevada Gaming Board, and *must* be random. And since just about every single video poker machine is made by IGT, they certainly would not take the risk of losing their license.

In the UK, now, that's a different story :) Talk about a rigged machine... LOL...
There are two classes of gambling machines. The ones in casinos should be OK as far as fairness goes, but I have only seen one VP machine, and the sign on it said it had an 88% theoretical payout.

The fake VP machines found in amusement arcades are a different matter. There is a joker poker machine that would have to pay out about 120% if if dealt the cards according to true odds.
 

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