#11
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Re: Which Blackjack Book??
The Knock-Out count is just a "knock off" of the Red Seven count first presented by Snyder. Plus, you have lots of additional strategy and a couple more advanced counts presented in the Black Belt book. It is the book that encompasses everything you need in one package. If I could only have one BJ book, it would be this one.
The other excellent book that should be read after introductory books is "Blackjack Attack" by Don Schlensinger. There are a handful of excellent BlackJack books including ones by Malmuth and Sklanksy that you can find reviews in "Gambling Theory and Other Topics" by Malmuth. |
#12
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Re: Which Blackjack Book??
My copy of KO is currently on semi-permanent loan. I only used to play when I was playing B&M poker, which I haven't done in 5 years or so.
Am I misremembering? I seem to recall that KO had nice strategy matrices that included many of Schlesinger's plays (in a much easier to use form than Snyder). Their simulations had KO with an edge over Red 7s (which is what we are talking about, right?) Were those sims wrong/disputed? |
#13
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Re: Which Blackjack Book??
"Were those sims wrong/disputed?"
Yes, as I recall the claims were found to be greatly exaggerated. The authours later revised it in later copies of their book. This is actually discussed a bit in the Third Edition of Black Belt in BlackJack. The end results in edge between using Red 7's or the KO system is basically nil. I find it easier to count the Red 7's myself, and also I don't have to start the count from a low negative or more abstract number like KO. For me Red 7 is just simpler and better. Also, Snyder has an "Advanced Red 7" with a few strategy tweaks that improve it even more. And the simplest and best advanced count is the Zen Count, also found in the BlackBelt book. I recall Malmuth and Snyder exchanging opinions on the subject and this was Malmuth's conclusion too. |
#14
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Re: Which Blackjack Book??
Thanks
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