Be a smart Blackjack player, play like a professional and cash in
on the profits! A Professional team of gamblers reveal in BLACKJACK 101
strategy, so you can cash in on profits. Sound too good to be true, not
so. If you have been playing casino Blackjack for some time then you have
heard of a strategy called basic strategy. The casinos know that 99% of
all the players that play Blackjack play some form of basic strategy.
Basic strategy was developed on computers (computers don't deal cards)
years ago and the casinos have spent years defeating basic strategy
players.
They have
done it a number of ways. The first that I want to enlighten you to is
called the break ratio of the dealer. When basic strategy worked, the
dealer was predicted to break approximately 1 in every 3.5 hands ( when is
the last time you played casino blackjack and saw the dealer break once in
every 3 or 4 hands?). This was calculated by computer simulation, but a
computer doesn't deal cards, computers don't try to beat you, but
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Introduction to Blackjack 101 click here. | |
Basic strategy refined with card counting used
to work when the break ratio of the dealer was 1 dealer break in every 3.5
hands. This is what the casinos know, and this is what they manipulate, by
crowding tables, picking up break cards and by shuffle techniques that
subvert the game. BLACKJACK 101 teaches you how to use these casino
tactics against them.
Here's an informative
document on this subject. Get the FREE
Introduction to Blackjack 101 click here.
Audio Comment Click
Here
Why is
BLACKJACK 101 better?
BLACKJACK 101 is better because it addresses the real
situations that occur in the casino. Not some fantasy games that exist in
a computer simulation or in the mind of the author of a
book.
BLACKJACK 101 uses plain common sense approach to the
game. It's a thinking person's game and once you understand the basic
concepts you'll find that your
mind and thought process is a far more
reliable judge of card play and betting decisions than a mechanical
strategy, reduced to the size of a piece of paper.
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