Tex
Member
I have been looking through old posts, and couldn’t find anything that addressed this. So sorry if I’m posting too often.
I finished A Man For All Markets (Edward O. Thorp’s autobiography) and the stories of “Casino Cheats” (crooked dealers and cheaters working for the casino) are interesting, as opposed to the “Player Cheats” (what you normally think of as a cheater).
I’m expecting the “good old days” to obviously be different from back in the ‘60s and ‘70s compared to today with corporate lawyers and accountants doing basic risk analysis and cost benefit analysis to figure out real quick some of the stupid (and sometimes ingenious) ideas they came up with just didn’t pay out well enough to still do it.
But... I have wondered if there are some shenanigans still in places.
I wonder if there are casinos that help themselves sometimes with miscounting dealers or artificial ploppies?
I haven’t played in Vegas or Reno, but I wonder if this is more a problem there where there is probibly a deeper institutional memory of cheating than my home casinos in Louisiana?
I finished A Man For All Markets (Edward O. Thorp’s autobiography) and the stories of “Casino Cheats” (crooked dealers and cheaters working for the casino) are interesting, as opposed to the “Player Cheats” (what you normally think of as a cheater).
I’m expecting the “good old days” to obviously be different from back in the ‘60s and ‘70s compared to today with corporate lawyers and accountants doing basic risk analysis and cost benefit analysis to figure out real quick some of the stupid (and sometimes ingenious) ideas they came up with just didn’t pay out well enough to still do it.
But... I have wondered if there are some shenanigans still in places.
I wonder if there are casinos that help themselves sometimes with miscounting dealers or artificial ploppies?
I haven’t played in Vegas or Reno, but I wonder if this is more a problem there where there is probibly a deeper institutional memory of cheating than my home casinos in Louisiana?
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