What, in your opinion? We need more than opinion and speculation to pronounce 6/5 a failure IMO. The vast majority of single deck games are 6/5, and it has spread beyond that. It has crept into more and more casinos and spread to more areas with each passing year, yet almost everyone in this thread is prepared to call it a failure? Let's try to be a little objective about this instead of posting baseless claims.Automatic Monkey said:It has peaked.
I am being objective. I read CBJN every month, and I see far more 6:5 tables being replaced with 3:2 shoes than the other way around. They tried introducing it in AC, a Mecca of bad rules, and it croaked; it is treated as a novelty game and I can rarely find a table. When I tried playing it on the Strip most of the tables were closed, and when I got in a game I don't think I've ever been hawked and backed off so aggressively.Craps Master said:What, in your opinion? We need more than opinion and speculation to pronounce 6/5 a failure IMO. The vast majority of single deck games are 6/5, and it has spread beyond that. It has crept into more and more casinos and spread to more areas with each passing year, yet almost everyone in this thread is prepared to call it a failure? Let's try to be a little objective about this instead of posting baseless claims.
The fact is player odds have steadily declined at blackjack (and nearly every other game) over the decades, and there is no sign of that trend changing. 6/5 is just another milepost.
Sucker said:Even if the dealer were to expose his hole card and you knew for a 100% fact that the dealer had sixteen; it's STILL incorrect!
Yeah that should have been obvious to me. I couldn't think of a quick way of countering him, so I ended up agreeing with him instead. :laugh: Of course I knew he was wrong all along...tthree said:Don't listen to him. Risking 1.2 sure thing to win an extra .8 is a bad idea. You risk 2 +1.2 = 3.2 to win .8, forgetaboutit.
What??? Walk into any Harrah's properties on the strip and you can hardly find any 3/2 shoes, never mind pitch games. Most tables are jam packed as well.Automatic Monkey said:I am being objective. I read CBJN every month, and I see far more 6:5 tables being replaced with 3:2 shoes than the other way around. They tried introducing it in AC, a Mecca of bad rules, and it croaked; it is treated as a novelty game and I can rarely find a table. When I tried playing it on the Strip most of the tables were closed, and when I got in a game I don't think I've ever been hawked and backed off so aggressively.
If you are thinking about it in terms of pitch games that you can HC, sure, 6:5 has supplanted a lot of good pitch games but in the overall world of blackjack, no, it is not taking over. It is wearing out its welcome.
That's a ridiculous assertion in itself, CEC properties in LV do deal a lot of 6:5 but they deal a lot of everything else too.Toxotai Kretikoi said:What??? Walk into any Harrah's properties on the strip and you can hardly find any 3/2 shoes, never mind pitch games. Most tables are jam packed as well.
x2Automatic Monkey said:That's a ridiculous assertion in itself, CEC properties in LV do deal a lot of 6:5 but they deal a lot of everything else too.
But who cares about Harrah's properties on the Strip? The Strip and Las Vegas in general is now a mediocre-to-poor destination for AP. The states of Delaware and Pennsylvania just got 13 new casinos in the past couple of years and not even one table is 6:5. There are only a few tables of it in AC, and the rule is rare in Indian joints. In all the places where gaming is expanding you will not find 6:5. In the places where gaming is dying you find it.
In Vegas it seems quite the success....the idiots and the people with good eyesight both love it and all those sloppy dealers. It has failed in most of the rest of the country, at least in the non-single deck variety...and even then it's limited to 1 or 2 tables more as a carnival novelty type of thing. I don't think you'll ever see 8 deck 6/5 games anyplace except on the LV Strip.WABJ11 said:Ive been hearing from those in the industry that casinos are moving away from 6:5 because it has been a failure. I'm happy to hear this, but what I don't understand is why it has failed. Are ploppies really that educated that they notice the difference?
The only reasons I can think of are market competition, and the fact that most casinos offer 3:2 just steps away from their "single/double deck" 6:5 tables. If you put $35 or $45 BJ payout right in front of someone obviously they're going to choose the $45.
So what are the reasons it has failed? Have we not given ploppies enough credit?
Sounds like a Super Fun 21 variant if all the information you provided is correct.snorky said:There's a SD game in an indian casino that offers 1:1. Dealer hits soft 17 as well. There's a lot of weird rules to it though, putting the house edge at .65 according to CBJN. This includes: tied BJ wins, double down any # of cards, surrender any time (including doubling and splitting), suited BJ pays 3:2, and splits allowed after hitting. They also have a promo where 678 and 777 pays 2:1 while suited 678 and suited 777 pays 5:1, (which isn't included to calculate the house edge).
Is this game playable? I avoided it at a heartbeat, but am surprised to see that the house edge is actually less than 1.5%.
In your opinion what do you attribute the slow death of 6:5 to? Competition from neighboring casinos? Smarter gamblers? I would assume most gamblers could care less about an extra 30 cents. I agree its dying, but what forces have caused this?Automatic Monkey said:6:5 has supplanted a lot of good pitch games but in the overall world of blackjack, no, it is not taking over. It is wearing out its welcome.
Certain facts and myths become part of the collective ploppy conventional wisdom, even they think 6 deck is better than 8, hand shuffled is better than ASM, which are better than CSM, BJ is a better game than most others (they actually know other who win fairly consistently at BJ, unlike say Caribbean Stud or Roulette), etc.,WABJ11 said:In your opinion what do you attribute the slow death of 6:5 to? Competition from neighboring casinos? Smarter gamblers? I would assume most gamblers could care less about an extra 30 cents. I agree its dying, but what forces have caused this?
A collection of reasons, one more important one being it's often the only pitch game a casino has, and it requires extra dealer training.WABJ11 said:In your opinion what do you attribute the slow death of 6:5 to? Competition from neighboring casinos? Smarter gamblers? I would assume most gamblers could care less about an extra 30 cents. I agree its dying, but what forces have caused this?
i dont find that to be true. the evil empire puts those games at their doorways where there is the most activity and i see conventioneers and the curious, many who buy in for a hundred at a five dollar table and play till they lose and have a few cocktails. they are there for entertainment and so they can feel the excitement of hitting a few blackjacks and have a few stories to tell when they get back home.21gunsalute said:Probably because most of the idiots who play that game only bring $20 with them to lose.
Imagine some one playing a 6:5 game and just hit a blackjack while only betting $5. Winner: "WHOO!! I just made an extra $1!!" Not exactly inspiring to most ploppies. :laugh:Most Interesting Man said:What excitement can there be when you hit a blackjack that pays 6:5?
This is a tiny sample to be drawing such conclusions from, play $1000 hours of 6:5 and your results won't be so favourable.billionaireben said:Here are the results from my games on 6:5 tables in vegas:
Tropicana
+15 (DD)
+35 (DD)
MGM
+100 sd
+115 sd
-570 sd
+100 sd
+120 sd
+100 sd
+100 sd
+175 sd
Paris
+35 sd
Any talk of ploppies taking dealer bust cards/your hit card is pure ploppy logic.billionaireben said:To beat 6:5 single deck, I think it should have LS since I got most of my big bets right but a few I would rather surrender. It has to be a heads up game (more rounds, 50% chance of a high card going to you instead of 1 in 3 or 1 in 6, no ploppies screwing up the bust card or taking a card you need. I know they can help you by accident, but the fewer variables the better.) You have to count and vary your bets widely.
This is completely backwards, IMHO the order should be: 1,3,6,7,2 and never play 4 or 5!billionaireben said:Order of value:
1 single deck good rules
2 single deck D 10,11
3 double deck good rules
4 low minimum LS DAS single deck 6:5 with no heat heads up
5 Perfect rules single deck dealt to the last card even money blackjack heads up.
6 six deck shoe good rules 5 deck pen
7 six deck shoe good rules 4.5 deck pen.