aslan
Well-Known Member
NDDAS seems to be a spreading phenomenon. In October I discovered that all the Bally owned casinos had it for their 2D games. Last week I visited Vegas downtown and found that all the casinos I visited under the dome or whatever you call it had a NDDAS rule for 2D (Fitzgerald's, 4 Queens, Binion's, Fremont). Then, on a tip I visited the Hilton. I thought it was a great game until I tried to DDAS and was told, "Not at the Hilton!" I asked, "Where's the sign?" "We don't have one," the PB, who was standing nearby replied. " But there's NDDAS in this hotel." He went on to explain how the Hilton had completely done away with 2D games at one time. He said that all the blackjack players quit playing at the Hilton, so they decided to bring it back, but they added the NDDAS rule. He admitted the Hilton had no gamble. My mouth dropped. "What?" He repeated, "The Hilton doesn't believe in gambling," he replied. "There's no gamble here." Nice guy. He told me the Riviera across the street had better rules, so I went there and he was right. I recouped my losses and made some profits.
The point of this thread is that it seems the casinos are awfully cognizant of every little nuance of blackjack and that they are slowly phasing out games that advantage players can win at. Does anyone have any experiences to relate? I've posted similar threads and received mixed thoughts. I'm wondering how competitive the casinos are in terms of BJ rules. Does it really affect business that much? It seems like where they have a good draw (entertainment, conventions, girls) they are quick to bring in the bad rules and the CSMs. Many places have a mixture of CSMs, ASMs, and hand shuffle games, I guess because they know that many people don't know the difference. Also, I visited ten clubs this trip and never saw a SD 3-2 game. Is 6-5 the new de facto standard? What's going on?
The point of this thread is that it seems the casinos are awfully cognizant of every little nuance of blackjack and that they are slowly phasing out games that advantage players can win at. Does anyone have any experiences to relate? I've posted similar threads and received mixed thoughts. I'm wondering how competitive the casinos are in terms of BJ rules. Does it really affect business that much? It seems like where they have a good draw (entertainment, conventions, girls) they are quick to bring in the bad rules and the CSMs. Many places have a mixture of CSMs, ASMs, and hand shuffle games, I guess because they know that many people don't know the difference. Also, I visited ten clubs this trip and never saw a SD 3-2 game. Is 6-5 the new de facto standard? What's going on?