Shoeless Joe
New Member
Can anybody tell me which casinos in Vegas don't require a minimum average bet of $25 per hand to be rated, especially those on the Strip?
My MGM card was accepted at a $15 Mandalay Bay table and a $10 MGM Grand table (i.e. at the very least they pretended to enter me into the system). I was told that I'd need to average $25/bet for 6-8 hours/day for room comps, but I was never told that they wouldn't rate lower play.Shoeless Joe said:Can anybody tell me which casinos in Vegas don't require a minimum average bet of $25 per hand to be rated, especially those on the Strip?
Shoeless Joe said:MGM Grand told me they would not rate me for less than $25 per hand as my card was returned to me.
lol ... I still remember when my $5 flat bet action got the "you sure you don't want to sign up for a card?" treatment from most of the Strip.standard toaster said:the stratosphere will rate you for any game play
they wanted my card no mater what even if it was $5
Amen! And it doesn't take much to get comps from them either.standard toaster said:the stratosphere will rate you for any game play
they wanted my card no mater what even if it was $5
Randyk47 said:Granted I did up my buy-in even at $10 tables but I'm not convinced that made much difference. Obviously because of the amount of money being bet the pit bosses pay a lot more attention to $25 tables and less to lower tables. To be honest you have to bet a pretty good bit of money to get comps of any real size and you can easily get trapped into "paying" $500 for a $11.95 buffet if you're not careful. I don't set win limits but I do set loss limits and I'm not going to stay at any table where I'm lossing regardless of how positive the count just to run up comps. If I'm lossing I'm lossing and I walk. All in all we came back with $500 more than we left with and while not a lot of money it wasn't a bad return on the $2,000 I had to play with this past visit.
It's no wonder you're losing. Leaving in a positive count because youre losing is superstitious and wrong, and you'll never make money until you stop doing it.Randyk47 said:Granted I did up my buy-in even at $10 tables but I'm not convinced that made much difference. Obviously because of the amount of money being bet the pit bosses pay a lot more attention to $25 tables and less to lower tables. To be honest you have to bet a pretty good bit of money to get comps of any real size and you can easily get trapped into "paying" $500 for a $11.95 buffet if you're not careful. I don't set win limits but I do set loss limits and I'm not going to stay at any table where I'm lossing regardless of how positive the count just to run up comps. If I'm lossing I'm lossing and I walk. All in all we came back with $500 more than we left with and while not a lot of money it wasn't a bad return on the $2,000 I had to play with this past visit.
There is no correlation between whether you lost the last hand and whether you will lose this hand. Law of independent trials.Randyk47 said:Well, I do make money playing but I'm not a professional and probably, like some here, not really a hardcore counter. I have a nice but limited amount of money I can or am willing to put at risk. Call it superstition or whatever but positive counts don't guarantee winning and anybody who has played enough knows that. At least for me there are times you just have to walk away and if that makes me wrong then fine. I don't give up easily or quickly and I didn't mean to imply I do. I'd rather be "wrong" and have the assets to come back to the table for another session instead of standing there with empty pockets saying "but the count was positive".
Actually, if I understand Randy correctly, he will win less but not lose more. He walks away whenever he loses too many hands in a row, regardless of where the count is. Presumably, if he's winning at positive counts, he'll continue to play. And, of course, walking away at negative counts, whether you're winning or losing, is always the right move.moo321 said:recognize that you will lose more and win less by leaving positive counts.
Well, in that case it is superstitious, but I suppose it won't really hurt you in the long run. It will slow down how quickly you win.Randyk47 said:Callipygian - Thank you. That's exactly what I was trying to say.
The correct thing to do would be to play through the count. But realisticly many people do not have the guy or the bankroll for it. The more you play the more you win over time thats the beautiful thing about card counting. Wether your winning or losing you have the advantage at a high count dont let a little negative variance scare you away.Randyk47 said:Moo - This is really not a challenge to you....I'm trying to understand. If I hear you right you're saying even when losing you stay at the table as long as the count is positive. How long? Do you assume that with a positive count the hands will improve in your favor and therefore it's just a matter of time/hands played?