An aeronautical engineer went over UTH and 5 wild. He would not play trips or bonus. When you really think about it the blind will pay (not as much) but you are not constantly losing the blind bet.
I love that you keep the side bet seperate to show the outcome. I keep my side bet money seperate often as well. If I filmed without playing that bet, people may revolt. Lol.
Kelly, you are correct that people may revolt. But that being said, it is your money that you are gambling with, and that Trips bet is really not a good bet, since it does not hit often enough. Mostly everyone plays it though, which is why the casinos love it. They know the odds, and they also know that 99% of players will play it and lose that bet in the long run.
Gents, you are miscounting “outs” on a paired board - it is 11 outs - 3x3 on the unpaired cards, and 2 outs for the paired card. You kept counting as 14 outs. A paired board is outstanding in this game - reduces dealer outs AND automatically qualifies the dealer. Cheers, let’s see more winning!
@@amadueskooler6559 you are playing against the dealer, one hand. Everyone at the table plays against the deal only. Where it gets confusing is the dealer is using the banker’s money. The card house only provides a service. Also, anyone can bring fifty grand and be the banker. Thanks for the interest.
@@amadueskooler6559 yes, you're essentially playing someone else at the table. In Florida and California they've come up with this system to get around the gambling laws that don't allow the house to take anything more than a rake. So in this case there is a person working for a "seperate" company that is sitting at first base that you're playing against. Technically each player at the table can have a turn being the banker/house but most people don't do it (you'll see the dealer move the banker button in front of each player to offer them to be the house for that hand), so that person at first base is acting as the house, but each hand the person being the banker pays the $1 rake. That's why you'll see the guy give the dealer the $1 chip before each hand starts. In california it's worse because they make every player pay a $1 rake per hand rather than the $1 from the dealer you see here.
I love this video and it’s so good to see people actually explaining how to give players the better advantage other than card strategy. Also Q8 is my favorite hand. I went to school in Tulsa as well
Thank you, although I missed your show live, it was very enjoyable, good fun and informative. Regarding what card game I would like I do like the wildcard game, but the Texas Holdem or even blackjack would probably be more beneficial ( I might learn something 👍) as hopefully we are going to Vegas in August, this game not available there as far as I know. Anyway thanks again and big regards to the Wonder dog Zeus🤗 Take care Sam
So who is the banker? Just some random person with a ton of money? Or is it someone from the casino? I’m just confused usually the dealer takes the chips and places them in his board
This is a Florida card room. The banker, who we are basically gambling against, is to the dealer’s left. The banker has to pay a rake each hand. The dealer just provides a service. For 50k anyone can be the dealer.
@@homelander718 In California and Florida the house is only allowed to rake games and not directly bet against players, so they've come up with this crazy system where a "separate" corporation pays for the right to have someone sit at each table and act as the house/banker. Technically they have to offer each player at the table the right to be the house/banker, but almost no one (except me) ever does it. So what you see in this video is that the banker player in first base pays a rake of $1 before each hand, and then that banker player is dealt the hand that would normally go to the house. If the other players win then the banker player pays them, otherwise the banker player collects all the bets from the other players that they lost.
The dealer’s hand is with the person on the far right. Since in California, casinos cannot bank their own games, there is a third party proposition player taking the action of the house: every two hands, the banker position is offered. (Normally in a California card room, the bankers hand would be up with the casino dealer like a Vegas-style game.
In California and Florida the house is only allowed to rake games and not directly bet against players, so they've come up with this crazy system where a "separate" corporation pays for the right to have someone sit at each table and act as the house/banker. Technically they have to offer each player at the table the right to be the house/banker, but almost no one (except me) ever does it. So what you see in this video is that the banker player in first base pays a rake of $1 before each hand, and then that banker player is dealt the hand that would normally go to the house. If the other players win then the banker player pays them, otherwise the banker player collects all the bets from the other players that they lost.
In Florida the card room just provides the service of dealing and distributing chips. It is the Banker’s money we are playing against. Anyone can bring 50k and be a Banker. This doesn’t apply to Indian Casinos. Thanks for the interest.
In California and Florida the house is only allowed to rake games and not directly bet against players, so they've come up with this crazy system where a "separate" corporation pays for the right to have someone sit at each table and act as the house/banker. Technically they have to offer each player at the table the right to be the house/banker, but almost no one (except me) ever does it. So what you see in this video is that the banker player in first base pays a rake of $1 before each hand, and then that banker player is dealt the hand that would normally go to the house. If the other players win then the banker player pays them, otherwise the banker player collects all the bets from the other players that they lost.
Card rooms in the state of Florida are not legally allowed to bankroll their own games. Therefore, they have hired an outside company to pay and take. Also, any player is afforded the opportunity to act as the “bank”.
In California and Florida the house is only allowed to rake games and not directly bet against players, so they've come up with this crazy system where a "separate" corporation pays for the right to have someone sit at each table and act as the house/banker. Technically they have to offer each player at the table the right to be the house/banker, but almost no one (except me) ever does it. So what you see in this video is that the banker player in first base pays a rake of $1 before each hand, and then that banker player is dealt the hand that would normally go to the house. If the other players win then the banker player pays them, otherwise the banker player collects all the bets from the other players that they lost.
Any broadway draw suited or not J ten suited or better. Thanks for watching. I’m a little tighter than the Wizard of Odds. Great guide for a print out.
In Florida, except for Indian casinos, the card room just deals the cards.and distribute chips. Just a service. The banker to the right is who you are actually gambling against. Anyone can be the banker, too. Need 50k. Thanks for the interest.
@HuffinGlu I understand your confusion. This is a Florida card room not a casino. We are actually gambling against a banker seated to my right. The dealer just provides a service. The banker pays a rake to the dealer each hand. But, we are playing against the dealer’s hand. Not dealer’s money.
@@pitbullpoker42 I already, told you, I got help from your mom. if you have an issue, come up from your mom's basement and drive over here and discuss it with me face to face. Tough guy keyboard warrior.
Now I'm a sucker for sidebets (unfortunately) and I don't play ANY game that doesn't guarantee a pair bonus (pocket pair, Ace-K, Q, J suited or non-suited, and pockets Aces. It can guaranteed money depending on if you're playing the game with an automatic dealer or a regular deal. Just the way I am cause the automatic dealer pretty much determines how often the seat you're in gets them often if you're with other people at the table.
@@pitbullpoker42 Is that a Florida rule? I know of California casino that would take one dice from Craps and draw a card from a deck of 1-6 to represent the taken dice. They had so much cheating, I guess.
@@roscoemuttley As far as I know it pertains only to Florida. The Seminole tribe controls the actual casino business here. In card rooms anyone can actually be the banker. That is who the dealer deals to.
Why wouldn't you check the flop, and turn amd river before a bet even if you think you going to win? You wouldn't lose any money would you? I've never played it before. Only the real games.
Not sure which hand you’re talking about. If it is Wild Card, you either fold, one bet or two bet when you get your cards. I usually two bet with queens or better and single bet with any pair. Thanks for the interest.
Of course. Always remember that with any table game, the house has a bigger edge when you play trips or bonuses. RU-vid has just about every table game to learn from. If you ever have a question please don’t hesitate to ask. Always bet with money you don’t expect to see again.
This video is full of misinformation and incorrect play. The basic rule is the newer the table game the worse it is for the player. This is a terrible game and there are much better games to play. 1) blackjack (0.5% house edge), 2) baccarat (1.05% banker/ 1.24% player), 3) Craps (1.36% don't pass/ 1.41% pass).
@@pitbullpoker42 Blackjack and baccarat are both offered in California and Florida card rooms, but probably not at the one you're playing at. And yes, you misstate odds, and incorrectly play numerous hands in this video. A few you even mention that you're misplaying them, but do it anyways (the times when you mention the wizard of odds correct plays).