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Power Craps is unlike any previously published craps strategy! PDF

187 Pages·2014·0.98 MB·English
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Preview Power Craps is unlike any previously published craps strategy!

Power Craps is unlike any previously published craps strategy! It does not rely on any of the shop worn strategies commonly offered by mail order or in bookstores. The system is not a theoretical system like most craps strategies. This strategy has been thoroughly tested by real players in real casinos and it really works! This system is so powerful that in two days you can quickly and easily learn how to win $294 an hour or more! • This manual completely describes what has been called the "most predictable system ever created." Here is just some of what you will discover in this complete guide to winning - • How you can win $3,000 or more every week using a simple strategy involving only one bet! • The secret power move you can use to add at least $100 an hour to your winnings! • How to win large amounts starting with as little as a $50 bankroll! • How to double your bankroll every 6 to 7 hours and rapidly move up to playing with black $100 chips! • A special bonus section reveals how you can win large amounts from Internet casinos - with minimum risk! • Discover a new lifestyle of money, leisure and the ability to travel whenever you want! • This manual has everything you need to know to start beating the craps game consistently! But there's every more - By special arrangement, $50 of valuable coupons are included free with this book. The success enjoyed by others using Power Craps can be repeated. You too can win $154 an hour or more. Here is your complete guide to your future profits! SILVERTHORNE PUBLICATIONS 1. Introduction Craps is the most exciting game offered in a casino. It is also the fastest game and one of the best games for winning money. Each throw of the dice offers another chance to win money, and the payoffs are made continuously. Blackjack has many more tables devoted to it, and more players play blackjack than any other table game in the United States. However, craps is the high volume money game, especially in Las Vegas and Atlantic City. It is not unusual to find thousands of dollars being wagered on the table at one time, all depending on the outcome of the next roll of the dice. The game is fast and offers the chance of winning huge sums of money in a short time period. The only gambling games offering such high potential payoffs are Keno, some of the slot machines offering large jackpots and lotteries. However, unlike playing lotteries, with craps the player's skill can have a huge bearing on his ability to win. Because of the amount of money which can be won or lost, craps has been the traditional game of big bettors, or whales as casinos call them, for many years. With the advent of wealthy Asian players visiting the United States, baccarat has somewhat overtaken craps as the big money game, but for sheer volume of wagers, nothing compares with craps. If you are looking for a way to beat the game, there are many books written about craps. These books generally fall into two broad categories. Most of the books you will find in bookstores are in category one in which the mechanics of the game are described with a simplistic betting strategy or two and many stories about the author's adventures playing the game. These books are very useful if you want to learn how to play the game, learn about craps etiquette or just be entertained. However, you are not likely to learn how to beat the game from these books. The systems used by the authors tend to be very similar and are typically the same oldshopworn systems used by craps players for decades. The second category of books is usually offered at higher prices on a limited basis, as through direct mail. These books or pamphlets usually offer one system that is guaranteed to beat the game. If you ever try to return one of these "sure-fire" winners you will usually find that the system seller can't be found. Because craps is a game of chance, where most wagers offer some mathematical advantage to the house, mathematicians say the game can't be beaten. Yet, I know the game can be beaten. Unlike the "bookstore" authors, I will offer you a new, exciting and proven approach to beat the craps game. My approach is not a "sure-fire" winner like some of the mail order systems. However, my experience has shown that it wins much more than it loses. The Power Craps approach to playing the game will give you a tested and proven strategy for playing and winning. The paucity of reliable published information on effective betting strategies for these games probably is the result of the blind acceptance of most gambling experts that in the long run no system can ever overcome a game where the casino has an advantage. The crux of this issue is how we define "long term." Any system will fail at some point if it is followed blindly to the bitter end regardless of the cost. However, if we break the "long run" into a series of many short runs, over which we have substantial control, then I believe the premise is false. In a contest between the casino and a player using a really good system, I am convinced that the player can gain a definite edge, especially if the house edge is less than 2 percent. Characteristic of all would be reputable books on casino gambling are discussions of the so- called gambler's ruin. These discussions are used as a basis of the assertion that in the long run it is impossible to overcome a negative expectancy, meaning a game where the odds favor the house. A puzzling aspect of all of the analyses I have seen is that any system player will continue to blindly pursue his system until he loses all of his bankroll. It is on this premise that most systems are generally dismissed as being useless. However, the proof that any system is bound to fail is based on a computerized betting simulation of possible outcomes. These simulations are unrealistic in that they can't test what skillful handing of a gaming contest will entail Individuals have a number of options that simulations do not consider. A player may quit at the "right time." He may adjust or change his bet selection methods to respond to changing conditions in the game he is playing. He may raise or lower his bets as circumstances indicate. He has the option of pulling off losing tables, with only modest losses. Conversely, he may go for blood during winnings sessions. He may lock up profits and limit losses. The Power Craps Strategy combines many of these "player strengths" to reduce the house edge to close to zero. Then, using specific betting strategies, the player can actually gain an advantage over the house. The result is that the player can win far higher amounts much more consistently than conventional analysis of blackjack would predict. After you learn how to use correct strategy to play the game, you will learn to apply a set of betting rules. These rules may seem a little complicated when you first read them, but they are easy to use and highly effective. Once you have absorbed how to play and what to do under different circumstances, and practiced your skill to make sure that you can play under casino conditions, you will be ready to take on the casinos. When you learn how to play and beat the game, there will be no holding you back. You will know how to make wagers that offer a minimum edge or "vig" to the casinos and how to increase your winnings during a winning roll. You can literally use the Power Craps Strategy to get rich playing craps. If you want to make $1,000 a day at craps, this is the strategy for you. Once you start winning at craps, it is like coining your own money. The casino chips will fill your rails, and you will find that the casino personnel will even offer many comps to you. "Comps" are casino jargon for complimentaries, and if you follow my advice and use the Power Craps Strategy correctly, you will not only beat the casinos, but you will have the bosses fawning on you offering you free meals, free rooms, show tickets and even offering to pay your airfare. If you want to learn to play craps professionally, you have come to the right place. Once you learn to apply this powerful strategy, you will have a way to consistently beat the casinos and there is nothing they can do to stop you! Skillful blackjack players always run the risk of being barred from playing. In Nevada, card counters have been treated like card cheats or criminals in the past, simply because they were applying their skill to beat a casino game. With craps, you will never have to worry about being barred because of your skillful play. When you start to pull down huge wins, all the bosses can do is sweat and pay you off. If you are a high roller, you can take the casino for thousands of dollars in just a few minutes using the Power Craps Strategy and there's nothing the house can do about it. If you are a low roller, I will show you how you can use your winnings to vault into the high roller category in a short time period. In writing this book, I realize that the readers will be a diverse group. Some of you will never have played the game. Others will have played the game but may not understand all of the wagers and payoffs. Regardless of your level of play, this book will teach you how to win. By the time you finish reading, you are going to know more about craps than most persons involved in the game, including casino managers, pit bosses and dealers. I know that you will put this knowledge to good use. I am always interested in hearing about your experiences using the Power Craps Strategy. My publisher is very good about forwarding letters to me, and I look forward to hearing about your casino adventures. 2. Why Play Craps? Dice have been used as gambling devices for several thousand years. Even the language of dice reflects its influence on history. When Caesar made his decision to take his army across the Rubicon in defiance of the edicts of the Roman Senate, he chose his response from the language of the dice player: "Iacta alea est." The die is cast. Gambling with dice is pervasive. It has been found in almost every culture, from American Indians to Africans. The Greeks and Romans used dice made of bone or ivory; others used dice made of bronze, onyx, alabaster, marble or even porcelain. Early forms of dice were called astragals by the Greeks. Usually made from the knucklebones of sheep they had only four sides. Sliding these dice down their hands and across the top of their fingers before tossing them, Greek women often used them not only for gambling but as an implement in fortune telling. During Christ's time, the Romans played dice games. During Christ's crucifixion, the Roman guards tossed the bones playing for his clothing. Herodotus wrote that dice were used in Lydia in Asia Minor. The rulers would often encourage their people to play dice games in times of famine to take their minds off of hunger. The Romans loved to play high stakes games. Nero was an inveterate dice gambler. Caligula would be considered a degenerate gambler if he were alive today. He frequently lost large amounts of money at dice. He often resorted to seizing the property of his subjects to pay his gambling debts. That this resulted in death, enslavement or imprisonment for his unfortunate victims apparently gave Caligula little cause for concern. Roman soldiers and rulers were not the only ones who tossed the dice. Paintings found in the buried ruins of Pompeii showed men being kicked out of taverns over some dice dispute. Dice playing was often associated with drunkenness and various forms of unlawful behavior. The Romans, in exasperation, finally banned dice games except for during December, which being the month of Saturn, was a time when all kinds of immoral behavior was expected, including dice games. The American colonists found that Indians often played dice games. The rattling and clicking noises made by dice were usually accompanied by a frenzied atmosphere. Toms-toms announced the beginning of each gambling bout, and drums pounded incessantly all through the games which often lasted for days. A line from an old Indian song describes the fever of the games: "I will go home if I am beaten, to get more articles to wager." Once into their wagering, the Indians played a true "no limits" game. An early Jesuit explorer, Pierre Francois Xavier de Charlevoix, in describing the Hurons said: "At this game, of which these people are fondest, they sometimes lose their rest and in some measure their reason. At the game they hazard all they possess, and many do not leave till they are almost stripped quite naked and till they have lost all they have in their cabins. Some have been know to stake their liberty for a time, which fully proves their passion for this game, for there are no men in the world more jealous of their liberty than savages." Craps is of American origin. Some time after 1800 around New Orleans, the American Blacks begin playing a version of the game, no doubt adapted from the English game Hazard, which the French sometimes called craps. The New Orleans version of craps moved up the Mississippi on the nineteenth century river boats. By about 1890, the game began appearing in the form of bank craps in some American casinos. The big casino game at this time was Faro, and craps did not become really popular until World War II after thousands of GIs learned backroom craps or street craps. The great Chicago fire of 1891 might have been started because of a craps game. The usual story of the origin of the fire was that Mrs. O'Leary was milking her cow when the cow kicked over a lantern and started the fire. During the trial, Mrs. O'Leary stated that she was not in the barn when the fire broke out. In 1944 Louis Cohn told of the true origin of the fire. He was winning a craps game in the barn and got so excited that he kicked over the lantern. Street craps, also called private craps, backroom craps or even back alley craps, was where a lot of gamblers first cut their teeth. Street craps always favors the wrong better who bets against the shooter making his point. The mathematics of dice, which we'll talk about a bit later, favors the wrong bettor in any back alley game. Most people don't know this, and most players wouldn't change their betting style if they did. There are a couple of problems with betting wrong all of the time. For one thing, a lot of players don't like it. They figure you are running some kind of scam or are a dice hustler. The second risk is that when the dice get hot and stay hot, the wrong bettor can find himself facing escalating losses which can wipe out hours of winnings in a few minutes. The casinos have simplified the game of craps by banking the game. It is no longer necessary to find another player to fade your bet; the house or bank fades or "banks" all the bets. This can be a real advantage for the wrong bettor. He doesn't have to disguise his moves because the house doesn't really care how he bets since they figure that they hold the hammer on all players anyway. But the casinos did one thing to hurt the wrong bettor. They took away his mathematical advantage over right betters. With street craps, the right bettor (betting for the dice to pass) fights odds of about 1.4% against him. The wrong bettor (betting for the dice to miss) has an advantage of about 1.4% working for him. his is why the only sensible way to bet in street craps is to bet wrong. When the casinos cleaned up the game, they barred the number 12, or in some cases the number 2, as a win for the don't bettor on a come out roll. With this rule change, the wrong bettor bucks about the same odds of losing as the right bettor. So in theory it doesn't make much difference which way you bet in bank craps. The casino has an edge on all bets. So why play craps? Because its origins are ancient? Because some old dice degenerate taught me how to beat the game? Naw. Not good enough. I don't think that anyone ought to play the game unless they play to win. Not for fun. Not because the game is the number one casino action game. These reasons are not good enough. The only reason to play the game is to learn how to hold the hammer over the bastard casinos. And I am not trying to talk anyone into taking up gambling. I don't have to. Nearly everyone gambles. And most do it badly. If you don't gamble, don't take it up on my account. But if you do, I want to present a little theory on why you should consider craps, and if you do pick craps, how you can learn to hammer the game. Let's assume that you don't know zip about casino gambling and you are thinking about the choice of games. I plan on presenting a pretty good case for choosing craps. But don't take my word for it. Consider for a minute the house edge or advantage over the player in most casino games. The following table summarizes the house advantage in certain casino games. If you look at the numbers in the table, the only number with a minus in front of it, meaning the player has an advantage over the house, is for card counting at blackjack. Most card counting systems were developed using computer simulations and don't work very well in the real world. Casinos are well aware of card counters and do everything possible to thwart them and make their lives miserable. Most card counting systems take months to learn to use effectively, require huge bankrolls, and produce spotty, inconsistent results. If you want to learn a very effective blackjack card counting strategy that produces consistent winnings, try my book Advantage Blackjack (See - http://www.casinogamblersbookcase.com/AdvantageBlackjackStrategy/). If you want to beat the game without having to learn card counting, then I modestly suggest another of my creations Power Blackjack.Other than the advantage available to expert blackjack card counters, where do you see the best odds in the table? The best odds are in the craps section. When you can get numbers down to less than two percent against you, the game is beatable if you know what you are doing. And that's why I'm here. I'll show you what you need to do to beat craps. Craps has some advantages over the other casino games that don't show up in tables of house advantages. It is the only game that lets you bet that a number won't show. Ever try that in roulette. Walk up to the table and tell the croupier that you want to bet a no-36 on the next roll. They'll send for the men in little white coats. But in craps, you can always bet that a number does or doesn't show. You have the ultimate flexibility in putting together a winning strategy. Before I start talking about strategies, I want to review the game with you. Read on to learn about the most fascinating game in the casino. 3. The Game If you have ever played craps in the back room of a store, or on an old bed cover spread on the floor, you have played street craps. The shooter would establish his point, and everyone would stand around until he made his point, or sevened out. The casino version of the game is called bank craps. The casino acts as the bank, rather than players betting against each other. In addition, numerous other bets are allowed. In the casino version of craps, you can bet pass or don't pass, come or don't come, make place bets, buy and lay bets, or bet the hardways or any one of several proposition bets. You can make one roll bets like the field, or make bets which stay up until a decision occurs, like pass line wagers. You have a great variety of bets that can be made. A right bettor (one who expects the shooter to make his point) could have as many as twenty bets on the table at one time. Craps is the traditional game of high rollers. It is the fastest and most exciting casino game. It is the only casino table game where it is possible to run a $100 stake into $10,000 in a couple of hours. And it is the most vocal of all casino games. Walk into any casino and listen to where all the noise is coming from. It's the craps players yelling up a storm. Every throw of the dice evokes a new response of whoops and hollers. Now stroll back to the blackjack tables or the roulette wheel. There is hardly a whimper from the players. The blackjack players are using hand signs to signal the dealer. A blackjack player could play for a week and not utter a word. In craps, the players are constantly talking to the dice, the dealers and each other. CRAPS LAYOUT To the novice player, the game appears very intimidating. Everyone else knows what he or she is doing, or so it seems. Once, when I was showing a lady companion how to play the game, she looked down for her bet and it was gone. "What happened to my bet?" she asked. The shooter had rolled a come-out craps and her pass line bet had been whisked away by the dealer. She felt like she had hardly settled in and they already had the audacity to take her bet. The game moves very fast for the newcomer, but after you learn the game, you will notice the times when the game is slowed down (to your irritation) much more than the times it is speeded up. The game is fast, but it only seems fast when you don't understand the bets or what the dealers and players are doing. Because of the speed of the game, and the variety of bets available, what is normally the best casino game for a player becomes a trap for many. Many people lose money at a ferocious rate at craps because they lay down too many bets and have no patience. Most casinos figure to keep about 20% of the drop at craps, that is, win 20% of all money exchanged for chips at the craps table. The thing I like best about craps is that when you start to win, there's not a damn thing the house can do about it. In Las Vegas, blackjack card counters get thrown out for winning. Winning craps players can cause the casino bosses to break into a cold sweat, but they are not thrown out. Usually the bosses start engaging in "slow down" tactics at a table where the players are killing the house. The boxman may reprimand the shooter for his shooting style. (I've seen players chewed on for shooting too high, too low, too hard or too soft — you tell me). When the shooter starts to make pass after pass with lots of numbers in between, the action can get serious. When the majority of players have black ($100) or purple ($500) chips in play, the casino can drop $50,000 to $100,000 in short order. I have seen individual players win over $100,000 at the craps table. The bosses will try to slow down the game, excessively examine the dice between rolls, bring in fresh racks of chips and in general make total nuisances of themselves, but the players are allowed to keep on winning. Isn't this a great game? I recently showed a young man how to play craps in a casino. He was a died-in-thewool blackjack aficionado, with delusions of counting down multiple decks. After an hour at the craps table I asked him what he thought. He calmly turned to me and said, "Well, I guess I'm finished with blackjack." If you have played the game before, forgive me my waxing eloquent. If you haven't played, then please take the time to try it or better yet, use my system so you will win. Most casinos will have at least one craps table, except for the slot palaces specializing in the one-armed bandit trade. Some states allow slots and blackjack, or some other combination of casino games, and exclude craps. The "real" casinos will have at least one craps table. The big joints in Nevada and Atlantic City will have eight or more craps tables per casino. Now that the casinos in many other states have come of age, you can experience Las Vegas style craps all over the country. I have played in a number of these casinos and always enjoyed the hospitality. Of course I enjoyed winning money from them too. The area of the casino where the craps tables are grouped is called the craps pit. The casino employee in charge of this area is known as the craps pit boss. Casino craps tables may range in size from 14 to over 20 feet. They look like oversized billiard tables. In the old days some of the floating craps games and games in sawdust joints used to convert billiard tables by attaching boards to the sides of billiard tables to act as backstops for the dice. This was also handy when the law showed. Pull the sideboards down and the boys were just having an innocent game of billiards. The number of players who can play at a craps table is limited only to the number who can squeeze in. If the table is crowded, it is considered polite to ask if you can fit in, rather than just shoving your way into the table. Some craps players have been known to shove back, and asking is usually the better policy. If the table is crowded, the nearest dealer will usually ask the players to scoot over, if you ask nicely. The tables are covered with felt which is usually colored green, but I have seen them in shades of blue, purple and even eye jarring red. I don't recommend the red ones though, and especially not for all night sessions; they are way too hard on the eyes. The possible craps bets are marked on the felt in a pattern of betting areas called the craps layout. In the old days, these were drawn on billiard tables with chalk. Now they are all nice and printed. The table layout has three sections. The middle section, called the center, rests under the watchful eye of the person on stick. The end sections are mirror images of each other, with one dealer per end. The center bets contain the lousiest bets in the game such as the hardways bets and a number of one-roll bets. I will tell you about these bets, but in general, you can enjoy a long and successful craps career without ever tossing a chip to the center section for a wager. The more important wagers are available on the end sections of the table. Here you will find pass line bets, which are made by over 90% of all craps players, place bets, come bets, don't pass wagers, don't come bets, field bets, the Big 6 and Big 8 wagers, and buy and lay bets. Odds bets, which are not marked on the table, are also made on the end sections of the table. There are usually four casino employees at a craps table. The person seated in the middle of the table, in front of the casino's chips, is the boxman. Today, many of these boxmen are box women, so I guess you ought to call them box people, which doesn't quite sound right. Anyway, these box people are in charge of the craps table. They count your cash when you buy in and drop your cash into the dropbox, watch the dealers, settle disputes with players, and in general act as managers of the game. Many times a floorman, who also may be a female, will be standing behind the boxman. If you have casino credit and need a marker to buy in, the floorman will accommodate you. They will also rate you if you are trying to get a comp. A comp is a "freebie" from the casino, which can range from a buffet lunch, to RFB, which stands for Room, Food and Beverages. This means the casino pays for just about everything. Many times the floorman may be joined by the pit boss, the big honcho of the craps pit. If the game is very active, another boxman may be brought in

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enjoyed by others using Power Craps can be repeated. You too can win . You can literally use the Power Craps Strategy to get rich playing craps.
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.