Once your name has been marked...

Jeff25

Well-Known Member
If your name has been marked as a counter is there any way the casino will "unmark" you? What if you were to make up some kind of story? You could tell the suit that you lost your PC last time you were in the casino and ask for a new one. When he/she tells you that your name has been marked, could you not act shocked and ask, "marked!!??..for what?". You could then tell him/her that someone must have found your card, used it, and some how some way gotten your name marked?
Could this work?
Any other ideas?
If facial recognition software is used I guess you would be SOL.
 

Sonny

Well-Known Member
Jeff25 said:
If your name has been marked as a counter is there any way the casino will "unmark" you?
No. Unless you bribe an employee to fix your account you will be stuck with it. Even then, the pit bosses might still recognize you if you return. Let them cool off for a while. Either play without a card or get a new card under a different name. Or, better yet, play somewhere else at least for a while.

-Sonny-
 

ihate17

Well-Known Member
Unrated on a different shift

Often you can return to the same casino very shortly after a backoff by playing unrated and best done during a shift other than the one that backed you off. Or do the same thing with someone else's players card.
Whatever you do, make your session short and do not be there during shift change.
Remember the pit for a new shift generally arrives before the dealer changes, so if you know that at 8AM, day shift shows up, you should be gone by 6:30 to be safe from incoming early pits.

ihate17
 

SystemsTrader

Well-Known Member
ihate17 said:
Often you can return to the same casino very shortly after a backoff by playing unrated and best done during a shift other than the one that backed you off. Or do the same thing with someone else's players card.
ihate17
You now have to be very careful using someone else's players card as certain casinos now require you to show picture ID to claim any comp. I imagine all the casinos will require this eventually.
 

ihate17

Well-Known Member
True but not used for comps

SystemsTrader said:
You now have to be very careful using someone else's players card as certain casinos now require you to show picture ID to claim any comp. I imagine all the casinos will require this eventually.
The use of someone else's card is soley for playing unrated (in your mind) while rated in the casinos mind. It is not for playing for comps but the person whose card you used might find his comp level has increased (or he might find he was backed off from a game he does not even play) I guess sometimes you give and sometimes you take.

ihate17
 
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