Nice video. The 6-7-8 is a solid play and allows lots of variations of pressing or regressing, you can play either aggressive with pressing or conservative with regressions to make the seven worth more. I would probably have some rules for the comeout and/or getting knocked off with sharp shooters to avoid too many back to back losers, but it's easy to adapt and tweak the base play to what you're comfortable with.
@@jacobbittner2021 I did give your strategy a try in my latest video. Unfortunately it didn't go that well for me as I was hitting points with lots of short rolls, resulting in many comeout trials. What saved me today was parlaying my field so it helped to offset a lot of my DP losses, as well as a final recovery lay bet, just narrowly avoiding a $450 loss from hitting a point followed by a comeout yo and seven. I still feel a large don't is a bit too volatile as success is dependent on longer roles to generate enough profits to offset the losses as well as the shooter not hitting too many of their points and not getting beaten up on the come-outs with sevens and yo's. With a large don't it's a bit like taking the stairs on the way up and a slippery slide down.
Thanks Jacob, I believe your 6-7-8 is the best strategy going around, bar none. As I do not believe I can avoid the 10 on purpose, I would only play the ABT as a one or two hits and down, if at all, but I acknowledge that it would be gold for a proficient DI. I just watched your challenge on Color Up, that was a good win after some early smacks on the 10. Cheers. Rob
I don't understand why it's better to play the iron cross with one of your numbers on the point. Would it make sense to play the iron cross with your don't on the 4,5,9, or 10? Or could you explain why it makes more sense to play it on the 6and 8 even though you're more likely to get knocked off?
There is an argument for both. But if your point is the 5,6 or 8 your cost to play it is lower. If the point is 4,9 or 10. You have to place all 3 numbers, not just 2. That's my look at it.
Nice that makes sense. So you wouldn't use the saved money to push up the other two numbers in the cross? You would just leave the two at the standard price and keep the savings?
Well you can say that about any strategy. Play 96 across, PSO 2x in a row your stuck. Play 3 point molly, 3 separate numbers +odds then 7 your stuck... I can make a hypothetical situation to beat any strategy.
Nice win against Jeremy using this strategy with a 250 bankroll. Since he bets like most craps players and is a random roller, you were mathematically a big favorite . Even with a couple of whacks, you still won.