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#1
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[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ] Get the Edge at Craps by Sharpshooter. PM me for more info [/ QUOTE ] Or you could just flush your money down the toilet and watch it swirl away. It might offer more enjoyment in the long run. Keep in mind I love shooting craps but any dice setting/controlled throwing system is baloney. Jimbo [/ QUOTE ] I don't understand why people are so reluctant to accept this is possible. While I'm sure the majority of people claiming to have a dice control system are full of crap, I'd be surprised if there wasn't anyone talented enough to be able to control them just enough to gain an edge. |
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#2
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First, let me list my qualifications for stating this opinion.
I started running a lunch money Craps game in the boys room in 9th grade after reading "Scarne on Dice", ran games in the college dorm and payday games in the barracks while in the army, then spent 14 years as a dealer, boxman, floorman and pit boss in the dice pits in Vegas. Even if a person could overcome the fact that each table has a different bounciness and slipperiness and that each pair of dice have different degrees of sharpness on the edges and corners that change significantly as the shift progresses, you are still left with the fact that the casino simply will not permit a player to continue using the short roll required by this technique. They'll tell you a couple of times to "Bounce them off the back wall." If you don't, they just plain aren't going to let you shoot. My opinion is the same as Jimbo. Just flush it. |
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#3
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[ QUOTE ]
First, let me list my qualifications for stating this opinion. I started running a lunch money Craps game in the boys room in 9th grade after reading "Scarne on Dice", ran games in the college dorm and payday games in the barracks while in the army, then spent 14 years as a dealer, boxman, floorman and pit boss in the dice pits in Vegas. Even if a person could overcome the fact that each table has a different bounciness and slipperiness and that each pair of dice have different degrees of sharpness on the edges and corners that change significantly as the shift progresses, you are still left with the fact that the casino simply will not permit a player to continue using the short roll required by this technique. They'll tell you a couple of times to "Bounce them off the back wall." If you don't, they just plain aren't going to let you shoot. My opinion is the same as Jimbo. Just flush it. [/ QUOTE ] When controlling the dice, you do hit them off the back wall. You make contact with the very bottom of the wall, which is about 1 inch of flatness. I'm so damn tired of people's blind ignorance on this subject. Just because it doesn't "seem" like something people could pull off. At least read a freakin book on the subject before making up your mind, people. You remind me of my idiot friends who I had to watch the Oscars with. They were making comments on who they felt should win and they hadn't seen one damn movie. Not one! Once again, I am going to treat this like before so that this thread doesn't spiral out of control like it always does. I'm just going to keep my mouth shut and reply the way I did to the OP. I'll only say something when someone replies with incorrect information, such as "the casino simply will not permit a player to continue using the short roll required by this technique." |
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#4
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Yeah, I guess you're right. Just because I spent over 30 years operating craps games and have never once, in any game, in any joint, seen a player be permitted to repeatedly shoot into the edge or corner of the table, or shoot in any other way that inhibits the rolling action of the dice just doesn't stack up against your knowledge. I mean, after all, you've read a book about it.
Pass the dice. New shooter coming out. |
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#5
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[ QUOTE ]
Yeah, I guess you're right. Just because I spent over 30 years operating craps games and have never once, in any game, in any joint, seen a player be permitted to repeatedly shoot into the edge or corner of the table, or shoot in any other way that inhibits the rolling action of the dice just doesn't stack up against your knowledge. I mean, after all, you've read a book about it. Pass the dice. New shooter coming out. [/ QUOTE ] Once again, you show your ignorance. The craps dealers wouldn't be able to recognize a good controlled throw if they saw it, because to an observer it doesn't look like anything out of the ordinary. Looks like a normal throw. And I should know because I've been doing it for a long time, and never once, in any game, in any joint, have I not been permitted to repeatedly shoot into the edge of the table. Also, for the record, I have much more extensive knowledge on dice control than just having read some book. My suggestion to you guys was to at least read a book before forming an opinion, and you took that to mean I was displaying the extense of my knowledge on this subject. Terrible logic |
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#6
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DD, you Sir have no clue.
Jimbo |
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#7
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[ QUOTE ]
DD, you Sir have no clue. Jimbo [/ QUOTE ] You make an excellent point. Thank you for enlightening me with such an airtight argument. Seriously, don't you realize that you lose validity when you just state an opinion with nothing surrounding it? |
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#8
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[ QUOTE ]
Once again, you show your ignorance. The craps dealers wouldn't be able to recognize a good controlled throw if they saw it, because to an observer it doesn't look like anything out of the ordinary. [/ QUOTE ] /sigh The ignorance of someone with more than 30 years experience. Ok, you asked for it. When you (read "you" as you personally, or as any of the people foolish enough to spend money on a dice control system and try it out [even if that person is a well known and respected gambling author]) take a place at the rail at a craps table, you either begin betting right away, which marks you as a loser, because you are betting on the rolls of a "non-professional" shooter, or you wait until it is your turn to shoot. If you don't start playing pretty much immediately, you are noted by the crew working the game as "out of the ordinary." They don't know what your story is just yet, but they know you aren't a typical tourist ... and they know they won't be making any money (tokes) from you, so they won't feel any desire to bend any rules for you. When your turn to shoot comes and the stickman pushes you the dice, you may fiddle-fart around with the dice to get them "set" for your system, in which case the stickman tells you to "Pick 'em up and shoot 'em." If you continue to hold up the game despite the stickman's and then boxman's requests, you are now suspected of being a jerk out to yank their chain ... not actually uncommon, but still "out of the ordinary." If you have practiced your set-up and quickly arrange the dice to your liking, it may take them two or three rolls to see what you are up to (since a player who fully understands the layout of the spots on the dice and can quickly arrange them is "out of the ordinary") ... except ... The instant you throw the dice in that peculiar lofting arc, everybody working in the pit knows what you're trying to do. You may think it looks normal, but to the guys in the pit, who have seen many thousands of rolls, it is most definitely "out of the ordinary." If the dice don't bounce and roll off the wall, you will get one nasty look and told once to "Bounce them off the back wall." If you do the same thing again, the stickman and / or the boxman will yell "No roll." and the stickman will knock the dice off the number they landed on as quickly as he can. Depending on the class of the joint, you will either be told loudly and openly about your actions or a guy in a suit will come out of the pit and tell you quietly, but you will be told that if you don't bounce the dice off the wall you will not be allowed to shoot. They aren't talking about bouncing them 1 inch off the wall, nor about having them "slide" a little bit out of the corner after dropping nearly dead. It doesn't take any great mental ability to be a Craps dealer, but you aren't dealing with idiots. Most likely, some of those guys in the pit have been watching dice roll since before you were born. They have seen your act hundreds of times before. They knew you were "out of the ordinary" within seconds of your arrival at the table, and they knew what you were trying to do the instant you let go of the dice on your first shot. If they continue to let you shoot, it is for one reason and one reason only -- they know you aren't good enough to pose a threat. And even if they stopped you, it doesn't mean they feared you or that they were trying to break your concentration or that they were trying to interrupt your "flow". They stopped you because you were holding up the game, and maybe just because you were being a jerk. Ah, yes. Excuse me for highlighting your ignorance, but it simply doesn't pay to try to buffalo someone with many years of experience who knows what he's talking about. What you think "to an observer ... doesn't look like anything out of the ordinary" will, in actuality immediately grab the attention of an experienced observer from the other end of the pit. There are probably many things about which you know more than I do, but on this, good fellow, you are badly mistaken. I hope I've persuaded at least one person to not waste his money by giving it to some gambling system scamster or to a (sadly) mistaken but otherwise respectable author. /sigh |
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#9
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Terry,
I like your posts and 'all, and I agree that dice setting sounds utterly implausible. However, i really think if someone actually took the time to become proficient at "dice setting" (if such a thing were possible) they would also take the time to work out the social engineering / camoflage such that they would not arouse suspicion. Whilst a "non-compliant" throw will allways arouse suspicion, surely you could be more subtle: E.g. make small pass line bets as soon as you arive at the table. Initially make non-suspect throws. When you feel the time is right right, set the dice and signal to your "Big Player" to make a decent size bet, etc. It would also help if you targetted a semi-clueless casino/floor. |
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#10
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If dice setting is such crap, then why does Stanford Wong think its possible?
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