probably 80% of us, why? sounds like your just getting started.. you should go read a book first, it can answer questions faster than us, and more accurately, and also it will answer some other questions you have without you having to ask them.. trust me, if you come on here with absolutely no knowledge, everybody is going to tell you to go read read read..newkidd said:how many who veiw this know PERFECT blackjack. know how to count cards effectivly i.e true count/running count. bet spreads and how to vary their bs according to the count?
You didn't ask who thought they had what it takes to make a living at blackjack. I have all the skills you listed, and with my BR those skills by themselves would make me about $9 an hour to keep me at an acceptable RoR, but there would be some wild variance too. That's not much of a living.newkidd said:statistly speaking, 4 of over 100 people...itz seem on "4%" of youz think you have what it takez to make blackjack a living. all others are "begginers" haha
being an AP doesnt mean its your job.. i AM a beginner at counting, but even if i was an expert, i still wouldnt be doing this for a living, as i dont have a large enuf bankroll.. also, when all is said and done, this is still a game of chance, so you could be a horrible player and still make more money than a super AP, as most people will never hit the 10,000,000 hands mark, which isnt really the long run..newkidd said:statistly speaking, 4 of over 100 people...itz seem on "4%" of youz think you have what it takez to make blackjack a living. all others are "begginers" haha
are you talking about gambling addicts? i dont get it.. also, its themselves, not "them selfs"newkidd said:p.s men who cant control themselfs arent in control of ANY aspect of their lives :laugh:
If we're not going to reach the long run then why do we play? And how long is the long run? Is it really more than 10,000,000 hands?SilentBob420BMFJ said:...you could be a horrible player and still make more money than a super AP, as most people will never hit the 10,000,000 hands mark, which isnt really the long run.
dont be a smartass, you know damn well why.. im going to play dumb and explain it to you.. if you have an advantage at something, you have the advantage no matter how long you play, its just that the actual results could vary greatly in the beginning, and the more you play, the closer you should get to the EV.. flip a coin 10 times, doing 10 trials, and write down your results, then flip a coin 100 times, doing 10 trials, and write down your results.. notice how the former has more wild results than the latter? now take a die, and say that a win = rolling a 1, 2, 3, or 4, and do the same as i said above, and you will see that even in the short run, you should have positive results.. of course you are not even close to guaranteed to have positive results in blackjack, or any gambling in the casino, but it is still in your favor if the EV is positive.. understand?Sonny said:If we're not going to reach the long run then why do we play? And how long is the long run? Is it really more than 10,000,000 hands?
-Sonny-
Yes I do, but do you? I’m being a smartass because I’m trying to make you think about what you said. Think about the questions I asked. Does it still make sense? Actually, you can ignore the first question. It was rhetorical. But think about the other two questions.SilentBob420BMFJ said:dont be a smartass, you know damn well why.
Yes I understand, but you didn’t answer my questions. If there is no guarantee that I will win, how do people make a living year after year from gambling? How do people win consistently if their chances are “not even close” to having a positive result? How is it possible for people to approach long-term results every year? Do pro players play 10,000,000 hands every year? Maybe the long run isn’t as long as you think it is. That’s all I’m saying. I mean, if I knew I had to play 10 million hands to overcome the variance I would quit today and give up forever.SilentBob420BMFJ said:of course you are not even close to guaranteed to have positive results in blackjack, or any gambling in the casino, but it is still in your favor if the EV is positive.. understand?
You let the cat out of the bag! :cat:Automatic Monkey said:Likewise, a frame of 10,000-25,000 hands is the number of hands in which we have a reasonable expectation of being ahead.
how do u not understand what i said? the people who make a living at blackjack, first off, do have some luck involved, and secondly, if you have the advantage, you have the advantage no matter how much you play, which means that as an AP, you have at least a 51% chance of coming out on top, thus if you keep repeating that, you will get closer and closer, and the more of a chance you have of being ahead.. what else is there to explain? you completely twisted my words btw.. "How do people win consistently if their chances are “not even close” to having a positive result?".. i never said that, and YOU need to read what i write more carefully, i said "their GUARANTEE is not even close to being a winner", there is a huge difference between gurantee, and chance.. how you phrased it basically said that i was claiming everybody has -EV..Sonny said:Yes I do, but do you? I’m being a smartass because I’m trying to make you think about what you said. Think about the questions I asked. Does it still make sense? Actually, you can ignore the first question. It was rhetorical. But think about the other two questions.
Yes I understand, but you didn’t answer my questions. If there is no guarantee that I will win, how do people make a living year after year from gambling? How do people win consistently if their chances are “not even close” to having a positive result? How is it possible for people to approach long-term results every year? Do pro players play 10,000,000 hands every year? Maybe the long run isn’t as long as you think it is. That’s all I’m saying. I mean, if I knew I had to play 10 million hands to overcome the variance I would quit today and give up forever.
Beating BJ isn't nearly as difficult as you make it seem. It's hard, but not impossible.
-Sonny-
I'd considering 10,000,000 hands pretty close to the long run.. becuase I think once I get to that point I will have completelly lost a sense of the value of money.SilentBob420BMFJ said:being an AP doesnt mean its your job.. i AM a beginner at counting, but even if i was an expert, i still wouldnt be doing this for a living, as i dont have a large enuf bankroll.. also, when all is said and done, this is still a game of chance, so you could be a horrible player and still make more money than a super AP, as most people will never hit the 10,000,000 hands mark, which isnt really the long run..
I would say it depends on the situation. A game with low variance can use less trials and still have a low margin of error while a game with high variance will require more trials. For BJ I would say 500 millions hands is very good. But 500 million hands is just for very accurate results, not for actual play. If a sim says that my EV is $43.17 per hour and I only win $43 per hour, I don’t really care. Even $40 or $50 would be fine. My actual results don’t have to be nearly as accurate as a computer simulation. That’s why the actual long run can be much sooner than you expect.SilentBob420BMFJ said:if somebody asked how many hands have to be in a sim, are you saying you wouldnt say millions?
You calculate your long run index (N0) so that you know how many hands you have to play to overcome different levels of variance. That’s how AM got his 10,000-25,000 hand estimate. If you count cards for a living then you will know how long you have to play to get the positive results you’re expecting. You’ll know how far away the long run is. You’ll know the difference between luck and skill.SilentBob420BMFJ said:also, assuming you gamble for a living, how do you know that you just werent lucky, and that the long run IS very far off?
Well, you can’t expect to be a winning AP unless you’re in it for the long run. Sure, you might get lucky in the short run, but that’s what the ploppies are trying to do. To try to win in the short run is ploppy logic. You might be a great player with a nice advantage and still lose in the short run. You have to expect that. In order to reasonably expect to be a winning AP you have to overcome the variance. Getting an advantage makes you an AP, but overcoming the variance is what makes you a winning AP.SilentBob420BMFJ said:you seem to have this ploppy idea that you cant be a winning AP unless you hit the long run.
It looks like most of the books you read were about computer simulations, not actual play. As I said, in actual play you can get away with much less accuracy that in simulations and still make a big profit. I would imagine that many players would be happy with a 92% chance of reaching their EV (or above), but I can’t speak for everybody.SilentBob420BMFJ said:there is the 70% long run, 80%, 90%, etc, but most books view the long run as over 99% accurate, so when you talk about the long run, which do you speak of? 90% within your EV? 95%?.
I could just come out and tell you everything, but that wouldn’t make you learn it. You said that you want to know why certain answers are correct. If I just tell you the answers you won’t understand why they make sense or how I reached that conclusion. The best way to do that is for you to think about things and figure them out on your own. My questions are trying to steer your thoughts in the right direction. Those questions will make you think about certain concepts. When you reach the answers yourself you will understand the whole idea, not just the final answer. That’s what you said you wanted.SilentBob420BMFJ said:sounds like your trying to make a fool of me, not teach me, because if you wanted to teach me something that i was wrong on, you could have just came out and said it.
Yeah, “perfect” blackjack often doesn’t involve card counting at all.rollem411 said:Everyone says here that it takes more than good counting skills, RC to TC conversion, and making proper bet spreads to play perfect blackjack.
I’d say you’ve got a great start already, but there are a few more details that need to be worked out. Things like deck estimations, backcounting techniques, optimal bet sizing, and understanding variance are all important parts of being a successful card counter.rollem411 said:I'm wondering what other techniques you are talking about because I know how to count, convert, make some index plays, and spread and I am interested in taking it to the next level.
Don’t stop there. There are plenty of other techniques that you might be able to use. This thread will give you an idea of a few other opportunitues you might find:rollem411 said:I know there are more advanced techniques such as shuffle tracking and hole carding, but I play in AC where ASM's are used and they use the mirror to check for BJ, thus discarding these techniques that can be used in casinos.