REG.GAMBLING'S FAQ
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Miscellaneous Frequently Asked Questions
This is the Miscellaneous section of the rec.gambling Frequently Asked
Questions (FAQ) list.
Changes or additions to this section of the FAQ should be submitted to:
jacobs@xmission.com.
Page last modified: 1-31-95
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Q: How is Baccarat played?
A:M1 (Steve Jacobs, Steve Brecher)
Baccarat is a card game that is dealt from a shoe that holds 6 or 8 decks of
cards. Two hands are dealt by the house dealer, the "banker" hand and the
"player" hand. Before the hands are dealt, bets may be placed on the banker
hand, on the player hand, or on a tie. Winning bets on banker or player are
paid 1:1, but a commission of 5% is charged on bank bets making the net odds on
such bets 0.95 to 1. Some casinos may charge a lower commission (e.g., at this
writing, Binion's Horseshoe in Las Vegas charges 4%.). Some sources report that
tie bets are paid 8:1, while others claim that tie bets are paid 9:1, so this
may vary from casino to casino. If there is a tie, bets on the banker or player
are returned. Once a bet has been placed, there are no opportunities for
further decisions -- both the banker hand and the player hand are dealt
according to fixed rules, resulting in final hands of either two or three cards
for each.
The value of a hand is determined by adding the values of its individual cards.
Tens and face cards are counted as zero, while all other cards are counted by
the number of "pips" on the card face. Only the last digit of the total is
used, so all baccarat hands have values in the range 0 to 9 inclusive. The hand
with the higher value wins; if the hands have the same value, the result is a
tie.
A game is started by dealing two cards for the player hand and two cards for
the bank hand. An initial hand with a value of 8 or 9 is called a "natural." If
either hand is a natural, its holder must expose it and the game ends.
Otherwise play continues, first with the player hand and then with the banker
hand, according to the following rules.
Rules for the player hand: If the player's first two cards total 6 or more,
then the player must stand without drawing a card. If the player's first two
cards total 5 or less, the player must draw one additional card.
Rules for the banker hand: If the banker's first two cards total 7 or more,
then the banker must stand without drawing a card. If the banker's first two
cards total 0, 1, or 2, then the banker must draw one card. If the banker's
first two cards total 3, 4, 5, or 6, then whether the banker draws is
determined by the whether the player drew, and if so the value of the player's
draw card, as shown by the table below.
Bank Drawing vs. player's draw
Bank N 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 <--- player's draw card
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9 - - - - - - - - - - -
8 - - - - - - - - - - -
7 - - - - - - - - - - -
6 - - - - - - - D D - -
5 D - - - - D D D D - -
4 D - - D D D D D D - -
3 D D D D D D D D D - D
2 D D D D D D D D D D D
1 D D D D D D D D D D D
0 D D D D D D D D D D D
------------------------------------------
D = draw, N = no card drawn by player
The probability distribution for a hand dealt from a complete shoe is as
follows:
Probability Probability of Probability
of bank win of player win of tie
----------------------------------------------------------
6 decks 0.458652719 0.446278570 0.095068711
8 decks 0.458597423 0.446246609 0.095155968
This implies the following house advantages:
Bet bank Bet bank Bet player Bet tie Bet tie
decks 5% vig. 4% vig. 9:1 8:1
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6 1.05585% 0.59720% 1.23741% 4.93129% 14.43816%
8 1.05791% 0.59931% 1.23508% 4.84403% 14.35963%
Edward O. Thorp and others have determined that card counting is not effective
in overcoming the house edge at the baccarat tables. Compared to blackjack,
card counting is about 9 times less effective when used against baccarat. See
Thorp's "The Mathematics of Gambling" for details.
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