Hey, GTC group, I was working a charity poker event the other night and found that the gaming firm also now includes a couple blackjack tables. I noted their rules and wanted to get some of you Speed Count advantage types 😎 to chime in and let me know if this is worth playing sometime down the road.
Thoughts on advantage play/Speed Count for the following rules for a local charity game? Let me know your thoughts…
Griz
$5 minimum/ $100 maximum bet
6 or 8 deck game
Dealer stands on hard 17
Blackjack pays 2 to 1
Double Down: players can double down on any two cards
Players can split 3 times resulting in up to 4 hands
Insurance pays 2 to 1. Insurance can be up to ½ the size of the bet. Insurance must be in whole numbers
If betting 2 spots, both spots must be at least double the minimum. Players can play up to 2 betting spots maximum.
Replies:
Posted by: Scan on November 7, 2012, 12:11 am
Posted by: The Griz on November 7, 2012, 2:46 am
Posted by: Pointman on November 8, 2012, 12:02 am
Posted by: The Griz on November 13, 2012, 2:13 am
yes, I think I will get some good karma points by playing, winning then doing some give-back donations! Great idea!
Posted by: Dr Crapology on December 8, 2012, 5:10 pm
Doc
Posted by: Pit Boss on December 17, 2012, 4:45 am
What city and state are you in, if you want you can email it to me privately at PitBoss711@gmail.com
I don’t understand how you are getting charged for these events. In our town the rental rate for a BJ table for a charity event ranges from $175 to $250 for a four-hour gig. This includes the dealer, table chips delivery and the raffle tickets at the end of the night. If someone just wanted to rent a table, the charge is $75-100.
The operator of the rental company has to be licensed by the AG’s office and the charity has to be a 501C charity. The charity must obtain a gaming licence for the evening as well. The charity is not actually able to bank the games so there should not be any money on the tables, it is just funny money. The charity makes money by selling the funny money something close to a 5 to 1 ratio or 10 to 1 ($20 cash get $100 in funny money)