It’s Time For Players to Stand Up & Fight Historically, a blackjack hand has always paid 3:2. So if you bet $10, you will be paid $15 (a 3:2 payoff). This assumes, of course, that the dealer doesn’t have a blackjack on the same hand. Single-deck games have traditionally attracted more blackjack players because they believe they have a better shot at winning playing against one deck. In fact, knowledgeable players who use the basic playing strategy in a single-deck game can reduce the house edge to virtually zero.
The 6:5 payoff rule increases the house edge by almost 1.4 percent. Therefore, the overall casino advantage for a typical 6:5 single-deck game where the dealer hits soft 17 and players can double down after a pair split is about 1.45 percent. The latter is nearly nine times greater than a traditional 3:2 single-deck game being offered nowadays in some casinos, and about three times greater than a decent six-deck game. But instead of talking percentages, let’s talk dollars and cents. Suppose you play two hours of blackjack at $10 a pop, and you are dealt an average of 80 hands per hour. A blackjack occurs about once in every 21 hands, so on average you should expect to get four blackjacks per hour, or a total of eight in two hours. Each of those blackjacks should earn you $15 (with a 3:2 payout on a $10 wager), but instead you get paid only $12 in the 6:5 game. You are shortchanged $3 on every blackjack, so in the course of two hours of play, you have been shortchanged $24. That is an atrocity. Casinos also love the 6:5 game because it virtually eliminates those pesky card counters, since many find the house edge too tough to beat with card counting. And get this: some brazen Las Vegas casino bosses are trying to implement the 6:5 payoff in double-, six-, and even eight-deck games. This would increase the house edge, on some games, to an appalling 2%! The 6:5 games also have these additional pitfalls, which most players are not aware of: If you wager an amount that is not divisible by 5, your payoff for a blackjack actually gets worse. For example, if you bet $8 and get a blackjack, you’ll get paid only $9, which is equivalent to the payoff odds of 5.625:5 rather than 6:5 (casinos will pay 6:5 on the first $5 of your wager, and even money for the remaining $3). When the game was first offered, I bet a red ($5) and pink ($2.50) chip on a hand and was dealt a blackjack. At 6:5 payoff odds, a $7.50 wager should pay an even $9, but the dealer paid me only $8.50. I tried to politely explain to the dealer and then to the shift boss that 6:5 on $5 is $6, and 6:5 on $2.50 is $3, so I should have been paid a total of $9. But my plea fell on deaf years. In a 3:2 game, a player can take even money if he is dealt a blackjack and the dealer shows an ace. But the math doesn’t work in the casino’s favor on a 6:5 game, so they won’t allow players to take even money. The game is mostly offered on low-limit tables in tourist locations where blackjack players tend to be less sophisticated about the game. Knowledgeable players with limited bankrolls are also faced with this dilemma: either play the 6:5 game with lower betting limits, or play the better 3:2 multiple-deck games, but with higher betting limits. If they opt for the latter, they often get less play time because they tap out sooner as a result of overbetting in relation to their modest bankroll. Casinos tout their single-deck games on marquees without mentioning the 6:5 payoff. Signage on blackjack tables alerting players to the 6:5 payoff is often minuscule and not read by players. Many players, in fact, don’t realize the change in blackjack payoff when they first sit down and play until after it occurs. To show you the magnitude of the problem, according to the December issue of “Current Blackjack News” (www.bj21.com), the 26 casinos on the Las Vegas Strip have 210 blackjack tables with the 6:5 game (that’s 20% of all the blackjack tables). But this isn’t just a Las Vegas problem. You’ll also find 6:5 games in Atlantic City, the South, the Midwest, and elsewhere. The bottom line is that unless players do something about it, the 6:5 game will ultimately ruin blackjack. So what can you do to help? First, don’t play any 6:5 blackjack games. Instead play only tables that pay 3:2 on a blackjack. Voice your displeasure about the game to a casino supervisor, your casino host, and even the casino manager. Be sure to also tell them you are taking your business to casinos that don’t offer this wretched game. Warn your friends and family about this outrageous game. It’s clear that in their attempt to make more money, casinos are ruining one of the best games for players. Don’t let this happen. Just say NO! to 6:5 blackjack games. Henry Tamburin is the author of Blackjack Take The Money & Run, editor of Blackjack Insider Newsletter, and Lead Instructor for Golden Touch Blackjack Course. For more information, or to receive his FREE Casino Gambling Catalog, call 1-888-353-3234 or visit www.smartgaming.com.
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