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Category Archives: Gambling How To

Best Souvenir Ever: Custom Card Protectors

So I did make it to Vegas earlier this year. And this is what my wife got me…

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It’s a custom Card Protector, that we got from a booth in the Miracle Mile. The back is even better…

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Love it. Briefly, what is a Card Protector used for, and what is the etiquette for using one?

Put simply, a Card Protector is some token or flat sided object that you lay on top of your two hold cards in a Texas Holdem game. It’s put there so that the dealer does not accidentally muck (discard) your cards. It doesn’t happen often, but if your signals to check or bet aren’t clear, or there is distraction on the table, there is a possibility that the dealer might make this heinous mistake.

It’s also used as a clear signal to the rest of the table that you need a minute to think, that you know it’s your turn but you need a moment.

Both purposes can EASILY be accomplished by using a chip in the same way, laying it on top of your cards, or even laying a single finger on your cards (my favourite alternative). But a Card Protector is a flashier way to do it. Often it’s used for luck or to display an interest… in this case, an unreasonable love of Mel Brooks’ SPACEBALLS.

Generally, I don’t use a card protector if no-one else at the table is using one. But if anyone is, or it’s an extremely friendly game, I’ll lay it on the table.

 
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Posted by on September 11, 2015 in Gambling How To

 

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Beginner’s Roulette Approach

I’m sitting here at the Casino Niagara, at an electronic combination Roulette, Crap, and Sic Bo table. It’s electronic in that the betting is by touch screen but there is a physical roulette wheel and dice set. I like that as I distrust a totally virtual machine to keep odds close to even.

The low minimum bets (1$) let me experiment with my own basic progressive approach for getting into a roulette game. I haven’t read any roulette strategy so this is from scratch.

The basic idea is to keep doubling red and black outside bets until you win, and when you do, switch colours and go back to the minimum. Since outside bets typically require a high minimum at a real table, you can start covering one of the 2-1 rows with small denominations (10% to 50% of your red or black stake) to spice things up. Counterbalance using the 2-1 bets with rows that have the most colours of the OPPOSITE colour you are betting.

Worked well electronically, went from 20 bucks to 28. Let’s see if this works at the tables.

P.S. Well, it didn’t work at the tables. At least not with a measly 100 on a 15 minimum table, at the Fallsview. By the way, that means 15 min on the outside (red or black bets) and 15 min on the inside (numbers). I’m not sure yet if the 2-1 row bets are included. Anyway, I just doubled up on the outside as prescribed but didn’t have the stomach to go above 100 today. I think I’ll stick to the electronic roulette for now =) By the way, the min for that is 2$ at Fallsview and 1$ at Casino Niagara.

 
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Posted by on June 1, 2013 in Gambling How To