Playing craps can be confusing, but with a quick guide around the table and what's going on in the dealer's head, you'll be on your way to shooting with the rest of the players.
October 9, 2015
Playing craps can be confusing, but with a quick guide around the table and what's going on in the dealer's head, you'll be on your way to shooting with the rest of the players.
"The bets to stay away from at the craps table are the ones the dealers try to get you to make," says Bill Burton, author of 1,000 Best Casino Gambling Secrets.
The side bets suck away cash that would be better placed on the pass line. On this basic and better bet, you're simply going with the shooter, hoping he or she will roll anything but a 2, 3 or 12 on the first toss of the dice. If it's a 7 or 11, you win. If it's anything else (4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10) you win if the shooter repeats that number before rolling a 7.
It pays even money, and at 1.41 percent, the house advantage is relatively low.
There's a bet you can make at the craps table that offers the most favourable odds in the entire casino, but it doesn't even appear on the table layout. That's right — no marked area to place the bet in, no mention of it anywhere and, you can be sure, no information about it forthcoming from the dealers.
If the point made is a 5 or 9, the payoff is slightly better at 3-2. The odds-bet payoff when the shooter makes a point of 4 or 10 is the highest at 2-1. That's because there are fewer possible rolls of the two dice that can add up to a 4 or 10.
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