A few years ago, the Ameristar DD game in the HL room was very very popular and at times, they had 5-6 DD tables and 2 other 6 deck tables that were often full on weekends. They still have the great penn and great rules but I have not seen too many players playing there for some time. I can get heads up or with one other player at any time.
I don't think they cheat all the time anymore but rarely do I see anyone win big anymore. I think they have some ability to switch to a pre- programmed shuffle whenever they feel the need to. I still win small amounts but have observed big losers on a reserved table or two. Hardly any big winners like in years past where players would be sitting with huge stacks of greens and Blacks in fron of them.
That's what I'm saying I can tell it started about a year ago. Whatever they did to the new shefflers makes clumping so bad there's hardly any players and you don't see winners. I was just asking cuz I've not been around United States much does all casinos went to the shufflers like Ameristar and the other casinos around here has. I spoke to a lot of dealers they said the same thing it's horrible back there people used to win and enjoy playing there no one wins and no one enjoys playing in the high-limit room anymore
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Well to the extent that these rigged-ASM conspiracy theories might have any possible validity, I would suspect that the only potential arena for such corrupt practices would be the Native American owned and operated casinos, where there is no state gambling commission oversight (for whatever good they are nowadays). Assuming such self-oversight, then indeed the fox would be guarding the hen house. Look out hens!
"Your honor, with all due respect: if you're going to try my case for me, I wish you wouldn't lose it."
Fictitious Boston Attorney Frank Galvin (Paul Newman - January 26, 1925 - September 26, 2008) in The Verdict, 1982, lambasting Trial Judge Hoyle (Milo Donal O'Shea - June 2, 1926 - April 2, 2013) - http://imdb.com/title/tt0084855/
Whether it is possible is irrelevant - virtually anything is possible.
This is an AP site, and we concern ourselves with probability. The probability that you are correct is very low, near zero in fact. The machines simply do not allow for the type of operation of which you speak.
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