Frog Quote:
<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border: 1px inset ;"> They use a crooked stick for a reason. My most successful ploy, watch for a red hot table. Big stacks of chips, on the table and in the rack. Ususally sign of a long hand, which is best, or a few good hands. Invariably a few sharps leave when the momentum shifts and the tide turns. But a lot of people stay, unaware the party is over. I bet do not pass, and then lay for max. Invariably, the hot table just does not turn to chop, it turns ice cold.
Second method. When casino very slow, cold tables go unplayed. You could sink the Titanic bumping into one. I will roll, against myself, by myself. Very rare condition, but effective. </td> </tr> </tbody></table>
Fezzik Quote:
<table border="0" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0" width="100%"> <tbody><tr> <td class="alt2" style="border: 1px inset ;"> Ignore the quacks out there that talk of "hot" and "cold" tables. Craps is 100% random 99.95%* of the time, and random events experience severe ups and downs, but it has zero future predictablitlity.
*For the .05%, See Stanford Wong's new book on Dice Control, which in my opinion has some merit. Guys spend months and months practicing pitching the bones on axis, which IMO gives an accomplished roller, on a fairly "non bouncy" table an edge (yes even after hitting the pyramided back wall).
Craps is great for fun since the house edge is only around 1.4% on pass line/don't pass, and 0% on odds. Just bet low, and have a good time, and avoid the idiot bets.
Any serious gambler that wants to win will of course play 21, sports, Video Poker, or spend literally months practicing throwing the dice at home after reading up on dice control/attending seminars, etc.
The jury is still out on dice control......... I for one believe it has some merit. </td> </tr> </tbody></table>
Frog Quote:
Might be beyond explanation, but hot and cold tables do exist. The only quacks I know are the ones that think you can roll a pair of resin cubes and predict the outcome, axis or not. Once they leave your hand, and bounce on that felt, the control is gone. Once they hit the back wall, with irregular pattern, they not only change rotation, they change direction. And how long will a table let you throw with alligator arms. Shortarming or not hitting the back wall? Axis rolling is a complete fairy tale and the Easter bunny left yesterday. Lets ask our dealer of 10+ years. I trust his opinion and time spent on the tables, in the field more than self proclaimed expert Fezzik. Are there hot and cold tables? Can anyone manipulate the dice rolling, to get a predictacle outcome?