CarnivalsEnd
Member
Howdy! I'm somewhat of a newb, but do understand basic bj strategy. Was hoping you guys would help point me in the right direct to make my upcoming honeymoon a treat instead of a credit nightmare.
My background, I've always been a wizard at math, so i fell right into counting cards. I've practiced now for a few weeks, and finally put the "rubber to the road" so to speak this last weekend. The end result was I ended up doubling my $500 in about 2 hours on a 6 deck shoe (probably more thanks to dumb luck than anything else)
In 2 weeks, we'll be honeymooning on a nice long cruise. From what I hear, they have BJ setup as follows:
Atlantic City rules were followed. To be specific: eight decks, dealer stands on soft 17, double any first two cards, double after split allowed, no surrender, dealer always peeks for blackjack, and re-split to at least four hands. The house edge under these rules is 0.43%. The betting limits were $5 to $200 at most tables and $10 to $300 at another table, which I never saw open. One game had the Wheel of Madness side bet, for bets of $1 to $5.
So I guess I'm asking how to take the cruise ship for all its worth :eyepatch:
Learning a new system won't be a problem, so I'm looking for experienced players to tell me which system they've used to make their advantage over the house the greatest. I've been using blackjack mentor to monitor my play, and I'm making the correct decisions about 95% of the time.
Thanks for the advice on the best counting system to use
My background, I've always been a wizard at math, so i fell right into counting cards. I've practiced now for a few weeks, and finally put the "rubber to the road" so to speak this last weekend. The end result was I ended up doubling my $500 in about 2 hours on a 6 deck shoe (probably more thanks to dumb luck than anything else)
In 2 weeks, we'll be honeymooning on a nice long cruise. From what I hear, they have BJ setup as follows:
Atlantic City rules were followed. To be specific: eight decks, dealer stands on soft 17, double any first two cards, double after split allowed, no surrender, dealer always peeks for blackjack, and re-split to at least four hands. The house edge under these rules is 0.43%. The betting limits were $5 to $200 at most tables and $10 to $300 at another table, which I never saw open. One game had the Wheel of Madness side bet, for bets of $1 to $5.
So I guess I'm asking how to take the cruise ship for all its worth :eyepatch:
Learning a new system won't be a problem, so I'm looking for experienced players to tell me which system they've used to make their advantage over the house the greatest. I've been using blackjack mentor to monitor my play, and I'm making the correct decisions about 95% of the time.
Thanks for the advice on the best counting system to use