Double Bonus Spin Roulette

December 28th, 2008 by Beat Casinos, How To Beat The Casinos, www.howtobeatthecasinos.com

Virgin Casino offers a neat derivative of roueltte called Double Bonus Spin Roulette. This roulette game is based upon American Roulette (so it has a zero and a double zero) – and it also has an extra wide “Bonus” well. You can make all of the normal roulette bets, which have standard payoffs (35 to 1 for a single number, etc). You can also bet on the “Bonus” well, which pays 12 to 1 – but then starts a “Double Bonus Spin” frenzy! The Bonus well is 1½ times the width of a standard well and is therefore 1½ times as likely to catch a ball or blue light!

Double Bonus Spin Roulette - Normal Gameplay
If your ball lands in the Bonus slot, all of your chips on the roulette layout stand (i.e. they’re not lost). In the Double Bonus Spin, two blue lights appear on the wheel. Both blue lights rotate around the wheel and each will stop next to a well on the wheel. If a blue light stops on a well corresponding to a standing bet, you win on that bet. The blue lights are independent so they can both produce winners. Yes, the two blue lights in the Double Bonus Spin are truly independent – the landing of one blue light has no affect on where the other blue light lands.

Double Bonus Spin Roulette - Bonus Underway
Want to win REALLY big? If during the Double Bonus Spin, one of the blue lights lands on the yellow well, you earn a big payout! If both blue lights land on the yellow well, you earn a HUGE payout!

Double Bonus Spin Roulette - Congratulations!
Double Bonus Spin Roulette can be played at Virgin Casino. Play Double Bonus Spin Roulette now and make some cash!

Vegas 20+ Bonus Blackjack

December 28th, 2008 by Beat Casinos, How To Beat The Casinos, www.howtobeatthecasinos.com

Fancy a game of Vegas Blackjack with great rules, and the chance to win big? Virgin Casino offers Vegas Blackjack with 20+ Bonus.

Vegas Blackjack at Virgin Casino
The basic rules offered in this generous Blackjack game version include:

- The Dealer checks for Blackjack early – saving you from adversely risking more money to split or double down.
- Blackjack pays 3 to 2 (true odds, not 6/5)!
- You can double down and hit split Aces – a great advantage!
- You can double down on any two cards, and double down after splits.
- The Blackjack dealer always stands on soft-17.

The powerful 20+ Bonus™ award will be loved by experts and beginners alike. You can optionally place a bet on the 20+ Bonus on any blackjack hand. The bonus pays out if you get a natural 20 or 21 (or Blackjack) on your first two cards. You must sit on that total (no splits etc allowed) otherwise you forfeit your bonus. The payout odds for the 20+ Bonus award are as follows:

Twenty Win: 2:1; Twenty Tie: 10:1; Twenty Lose: 20:1; Blackjack Win: 3:1; Blackjack Tie: 30:1

Imagine getting a payout of 30:1 on a blackjack tie! That’s a great payout for a hand which would otherwise be a “push”. I wouldn’t (personally) play the 20+ bonus every hand, but I can see its appeal as an occasional bet (a lot like playing perfect pair or triple 7 side bets on some other blackjack games). The basic rules on this game are very good whether you play the bonus or not. Have fun playing Vegas Blackjack with 20+ bonus at Virgin Casino! And do let me know how you get on – email me at davewestlondon@yahoo.co.uk.

Don’t Take Blackjack Insurance!

December 28th, 2008 by Beat Casinos, How To Beat The Casinos, www.howtobeatthecasinos.com

The “Insurance” side bet is available in virtually all blackjack games. You put money down for insurance when the dealer has an Ace showing as their first card, if you think that the dealer will get a blackjack. The bet pays 2:1 if the dealer does get a blackjack, and loses if they don’t.

What are the chances of a dealer getting blackjack? This can be affected by the number of decks played in the game, what the current “count” is, and how deeply the dealer penetration of the cards goes. To get a blackjack a dealer needs an Ace (1 chance in 13 = 7.7%) and a picture / ten card (4 chances in 13, but only makes a blackjack when an Ace is present already = 30%). On average, the dealer will get a blackjack about once in every 23 hands. That’s also the same for a player.

Unless you’re a very experienced card counter, blackjack INSURANCE bets should be AVOIDED. The average house edge on the insurance bet is about 7% (on 4 decks and above). In the long run, not taking the blackjack insurance bet will save you money. Insurance is a premium paid to protect against an event that might or might not happen. In the case of blackjack insurance, the premium is simply too high to pay when compared to the relative risk.

Zero Edge Blackjack

December 28th, 2008 by Beat Casinos, How To Beat The Casinos, www.howtobeatthecasinos.com

Can you really play a truly fair game of blackjack with ZERO house edge? Yes, but only at one site online: Betfair Casino.

As a way of differentiating themselves in the market, Betfair Casino offer a range of ZERO edge games (including Zero Blackjack, Zero Roulette, Zero Baccarat, and Zero Jacks or Better Video Poker). Up to 3 hands at a time can be played in Zero Blackjack, with a minimum total stake of 5GBP and a maximum total stake of 50GBP.


The basic Zero Blackjack game uses 8 decks with the cards shuffled after every hand. Blackjacks pay normal 3:2 money – however, when a blackjack is SUITED (i.e. Any Ten-value card and an Ace of the SAME SUIT), that blackjack pays 2 to 1! Additionally, if the player has a 5-card 21, then this is also paid out at 2 to 1!

Under the Zero Blackjack game rules, all pairs can be split except for Aces. All pairs can only be split once. Players can double down if their first two cards are 8, 9, 10, or 11. Double down after splitting is allowed. If the dealer shows an Ace as an up card, players can take insurance which pays out at the normal 2:1 odds if the dealer does have a blackjack.

The expected return to players on Zero Blackjack (using perfect player strategy) is 100.0%, correct to 2 decimal places. You simply can’t get a fairer game than that!

Hi / Lo Blackjack Strategy

December 28th, 2008 by Beat Casinos, How To Beat The Casinos, www.howtobeatthecasinos.com

In this article, I’d like to introduce one of the most popular and most simple blackjack card counting systems: The Hi-Lo System.

The Hi-Lo system works by giving / assigning every card in the deck DEALT a point value of +1, 0, or -1. Cards 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 each have a count value of “+1″. Cards 7, 8, and 9 each count as 0. Aces and Picture / Ten cards each have a count value of “-1″. This small table shows the cards and values more clearly:


Card Values vs Points Values

Using the blackjack hi-lo card counting system you want to bet more when the count is HIGH (i.e. when lots of low cards have been dealt out, leaving high cards / ten cards in the deck to be dealt), and less when the count is LOW. Why? High cards help the player to get better scores, and also give you a better chance at getting a natural blackjack. In contrast, low cards help the dealer to pull cards without going bust.

To use the blackjack hi-lo card counting system, as each card is DEALT, simply add the resulting value based upon the card dealt – so if it’s a ten value, subtract one. If it’s a 4 etc, add one. You always START AT ZERO at the beginning of a new shoe (regardless of how many decks of cards are being played in that shoe). You must count ALL cards shown on the layout: whether they belong to you, the dealer, or other players. ALL cards must be allowed for – otherwise your count will be inaccurate.

Let’s assume that 8 cards have been dealt from the deck, and that they were as follows: “Q, Ten, 4, 7,5,9, King, 3″. We would start from zero and then apply the following: -1, -1, +1,+0, +1, +0, -1″. Totalling those scores together our RUNNING COUNT is “-1″. This means that more picture / ace cards have been dealt from the deck than is statistically good for us. So we would bet LOW at this point.

Let’s take an alternative stream of 8 cards dealt: “5,6,3,8,7,Ten, 9, 2″. We would start from zero and then apply the following: +1, +1, +1, +0, +0, -1, 0, +1″. Totalling those scores together our RUNNING COUNT is “+3″. This means that less picture / ace cards have been dealt from the deck than is statistically good for the casino. So we would bet HIGH at this point. (The higher the count, the more we bet).

Betting thresholds depend on how many decks are being played and how far through the decks have been dealt – but for me I find I start to bet noticably higher once the count is “+4″ or more in my favour – and certainly always when it is “+6″ or more.

If you follow this method exactly as stated however, you may still lose. Why? Because you also need to factor in something called the “TRUE count”. A true count takes into consideration not only the “running count” of the actual cards that have come out so far, but also allows for how far statistically you have been dealt through all available cards in the shoe.

To get the True Count, you divide the running count by the number of decks still left to play. Let’s say you’re on a double-deck (104-card) blackjack game, and only those 8 cards have come out. You’re therefore 8/104 into the deck. If your true count is +3, you need to divide this number by 2, as there’s still roughly 2 decks to play. So your running count is +3, but your TRUE COUNT is 1.5.

If however you’re on a six deck (312-card) blackjack game, and only those 8 cards have come out, then you’re 8/312 into the deck. If your true count is +3, then you divide +3 by 6 to get the running count: your TRUE COUNT is 0.5.

Each TRUE COUNT point gives the player an advantage of about 0.5% – but the casino has the edge when the cards are first shuffled by about 0.5%. Therefore a True Count of +4 would give an edge TO THE PLAYER of 4 x 0.5% = 2% less house starting advantage of 0.5% = REAL PLAYER ADVANTAGE of 1.5%.

This is why I personally tend to wait until I have a TRUE COUNT of about +2 or +3 before I start betting too heavily. Technically, any advantage is a good thing for a player – but I tend to bet cautiously. The higher the TRUE COUNT plus value, the more I bet. Of course, if your bets swing wildly from say $5 / £5 on no advantage to £100 / $100 on a +4 advantage, you WILL attract attention from casino surveillence (and could end up banned like I was in the UK). So by all means play higher bets, but maybe go from $5 / £5 to $25 / £25 in your swings to avoid detection.

This short primer simply describes one possible system for blackjack card counting. There are other more advanced systems that can give even better results – I’ll cover these in the future.

Need to play blackjack right now? Check out any of the excellent casinos I feature in this blog – all of which I’ve played at myself. Just some of these include: Virgin Casino – £50 free, Betfair Casino – £75 free, Totesport Casino, 32Red Casino – £100 or $100 Bonus, and Betfred Casino.

Good luck beating the casinos! Let me know your thoughts / how you get on.

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