M
Mike_25
Guest
Example of dealer taking majority of cards: Casino War
• Player and dealer each draw 1 card for bet
• Tie = player chooses fold or triple bet for "war"
• "War": Player/dealer each draw 2 face-down, 1 face-up. High face-up card wins.
• Dealer draws 3+ cards for one player card, taking majority of cards.
• So low probability of high-value cards (like tens) dealt to player.
• Exact probabilities depend on rules, but more dealer cards means lower chances of high-value cards to player.
The key is: however many more cards dealer draws than player translates to lower probabilities of desirable cards for player. Casino War has dealer drawing most cards, so player unlikely to get high-value cards. In general, more relative dealer cards = lower relative player probabilities. Let me know if clarification needed.
• Player and dealer each draw 1 card for bet
• Tie = player chooses fold or triple bet for "war"
• "War": Player/dealer each draw 2 face-down, 1 face-up. High face-up card wins.
• Dealer draws 3+ cards for one player card, taking majority of cards.
• So low probability of high-value cards (like tens) dealt to player.
• Exact probabilities depend on rules, but more dealer cards means lower chances of high-value cards to player.
The key is: however many more cards dealer draws than player translates to lower probabilities of desirable cards for player. Casino War has dealer drawing most cards, so player unlikely to get high-value cards. In general, more relative dealer cards = lower relative player probabilities. Let me know if clarification needed.