I was in reno doing game scouting there and saw a casino offer even money in 6/5 blackjack. How much of an advantage does the player get for taking even money in 6/5 blackjack? Or is there an advantage at all?
I was in reno doing game scouting there and saw a casino offer even money in 6/5 blackjack. How much of an advantage does the player get for taking even money in 6/5 blackjack? Or is there an advantage at all?
Last edited by seriousplayer; 08-30-2014 at 10:32 AM.
"Everyone wants to be rich, but nobody wants to work for it." -Ryan Howard [The Office]
Yes, of course there's an edge. You don't mention the number of decks, so let's assume SD. You get a natural vs. dealer's ace 2 x 4/52 x 16/51 x 3/50 = 0.2896% of the time, or once every 345 hands. Suppose your bet is $5. When this happens, your e.v. for NOT talking even money is +$6 x 34/49 = $4.16. Naturally, if you accept the even money, your e.v. is a certain $5. So, for every $5 that you bet, you make an extra $0.84 when you accept even money, which is 16.8% of your original bet. Of course, this edge manifests itself only about 0.3% of the time, so your global edge, across all play is only 16.8% x .3% = 0.05%.
Don
Good question, take even money. I dont got the math in front of me but im sure in a moderate negative count, you might be better of taking the 6:5, but you shouldn't be playing until then anyway.
Last edited by ZenKinG; 08-30-2014 at 04:42 PM.
"I dont got [sic] the math in front of me but im sure in a moderate negative count, you might be better of taking the 6:5,"
Not even remotely close. You would need an unspeakably negative count, the likes of which you would never see in a single-deck game. In other words, don't even think about it!
Don
Even money in a 6:5 game has insurance paying 5:1 on that decision (take 1 unit insurance on a 5 unit bet and get paid 5 units if the dealer has BJ or lose 1 unit out of the 6 unit payoff for BJ if the dealer doesn't have it). With one T for every 5 other card in the deck this is break even. Off the top the ratio is 4:9 which is so far north of 1:5 it is ridiculous. If you assume all other cards are distributed equally, you get 9:45 with 15 neutral cards and 5 aces. That's a HILO count of 14 high cards and 25 low cards out of 54 cards. The TC = (14-25)/(54/52) = -10.6. I think it is reasonable to call that always take even money. If you are still there at TC -11 you have bigger problems than whether or not to take even money in a 6:5 game if it is offered.
Last edited by Three; 08-31-2014 at 12:20 PM.
Be careful when doing this (insuring for less) especially if you have a BJ. I've done it before at a store where you'd expect the dealer to know how to handle the situation (how to pay out). But NOPE, dealer couldn't figure it out and she tried to take my BJ bet and pay insurance with it.
"Everyone wants to be rich, but nobody wants to work for it." -Ryan Howard [The Office]
Bookmarks