As much as casinos would like to wean us onto other games, blackjack remains
the most popular game in the table pits. Per dollar wagered, the casinos
make more money on Caribbean Stud and other relatively new games, but many
more dollars are wagered on blackjack.
What's a profit-hungry operator to do? Sometimes the choice is to offer
something that looks like blackjack, feels like blackjack, but isn't quite
as beatable as blackjack.
At the Global Gaming Expo at the Las Vegas Convention Center, I took a close
look at three of the latest wrinkles. All seem like fun, but be careful. All
three also increase the house edge above and beyond that on the basic game.
As I passed the Gemaco booth, I picked up a basic strategy card for Extreme
21, developed by Canadian Stook LTD and already being played in Canada,
along with a few tribal casinos in the United States. In Extreme 21, player
21s always win, although blackjacks pay only even money, and you can double
down on any number of cards.
There is no cutoff at which the dealer must stand. No "hit soft 17/stand on
all 17s" variation - the dealer hits until he beats you or busts. There are
no pushes. If you have 13 and the dealer has 13, the dealer who draws an Ace
doesn't hit again and risk busting. That Ace gives the dealer a 14 that
beats your 13, and the house takes your money.
With more than one player at the table, bets are decided in numerical turn.
If you have 13, I have 14 and the dealer shows 13, and the dealer draws an
Ace, he takes your money, then hits again to decide my bet.
Bottom line: House edge against a specially adapted basic strategy is 1.16
percent, nearly three times as high as the 0.4 percent or so on a basic
no-frills six-deck game. You're paying for a bit of intrigue.
Another new game, Easy as 1-2-3, takes all the strategy decisions away from
the player.
Players start with an ante, then the dealer starts three blackjack hands
with a face-up card on each. Players then choose one hand, and match the
ante with a bet. The dealer plays out all three hands until they either make
17 or higher, or bust.
Those who bet on the winning hand win even money, or win bonuses on some
hands. In the version on display at the expo, bonuses ranged from 2-1 on a
blackjack to 15-1 on a blackjack in spades if the other hands also are both
blackjacks.
After bets are decided, play continues with the dealer taking away enough
cards from each hand so that starting points of 16 or less are left on each
hand. First cards dealt are first taken away, so a hand that came up 3, 5, King
will have just the 3 taken away, leaving a 15 to start.
Players have pretty good information before they choose their bets, but
they're still betting on one hand against two others. House edge varies,
depending on the bonus pay table.
Galaxy Gaming was on hand with Lucky Ladies. Already fairly widely
distributed in online casinos and available in a few tribal casinos, Lucky
Ladies is a side bet that the player's first two cards will total 20.
Pay tables vary, but start at 4-1 for any 20 and max out at 1,000-1 for two
Queens of hearts against a dealer blackjack, with variable returns in
between for suited 20, matched 20 or a Queen of hearts pair.
Stanley Ko's analysis gives the house edge a range from 18.4 percent to 30
percent, depending on pay table and number of decks in play. Stick with
blackjack.
* * *
Also of interest to blackjack players are three new developments from
ShuffleMaster Inc., distributor of Let It Ride and other games as well as
the pioneer in shuffling machines.
ShuffleMaster, whose King shuffler was an early entry among continuous
shufflers, now has the one2six shuffler, which continuously shuffles four,
five or six decks. Promotional literature says it's faster than any other
continuous shuffler - giving more hands per hour for the house edge to work
against you.
Then there's the Intelligent Shoe, which reads each card as it's dealt. In
baccarat, it can interface with a display at the table to post the outcome
of each hand.
Of more interest to blackjack players is that it can transmit results to a
remote location, and also keeps a time and date-stamped log for each hand.
All the easier to track your play.
And for those casinos truly worried about card counters, there's the
voice-activated Bloodhound blackjack monitoring system. An operator narrates
the game, giving units wagered, cards dealt and play decisions. Bloodhound's
software then compares the patterns to a card counter's betting patterns,
basic strategy play, shuffle tracking, hole-card play. It graphs out the
comparisons, and gives a synopsis, including the house edge against the
player - or that player's edge and expected win per hour vs. the house. And
Bloodhound keeps a permanent record of the player's performance.
Since Bloodhound is said to be able to differentiate between a counter who
is a threat and a would-be counter who isn't, some operator, somewhere, is
likely to find he's been spending too much time, effort and money worrying
about low-limit counters.