Craps
Craps appears like a difficult game, and it certainly can be, but you don’t have to understand all of the intricacies to participate in it well and get a honest return. If you stick with the general bets with a small casino edge and do not wager when you are not assured what it is you’re betting on and its odds.
By betting on the pass line and buying odds you can wager with approximately no house advantage. This just about makes the term ‘betting’ invalid if you really think about it.
Pass Line
The contest starts by placing a bet on the Pass or Don’t Pass prior to the first throw. If a 7 or eleven is rolled 1st you come away with a win and two, 3, or 12 will result in you loosing if you place a bet on pass. The converse is true if you wager on Do not Pass. Except twelve is a push if you bet Do not Pass. Just about everyone bets on Pass, so if you decide on Don’t Pass, do not draw recognition to yourself, specifically if you win. If you win then everybody else just lost, and aren’t going to take kindly to flaunting. Should any number other than two, three, seven, eleven or twelve are rolled 1st, that number is the point. Do not wager on the Pass line following the Come Out throw, it is allowed, but the probabilities are against you.
Purchasing the Odds
In order to take control of the wager with virtually no house advantage, you have to at first place a bet on the Pass Line. Next you will be able to bet a multiple (depending on the betting house) of your Pass bet that the point will be tossed prior to a seven. Depending on the number of the point, you can come away with up to 2:1.
Wagering along these basic lines will provide you with honest hope of coming out a winner. Add the excitement that the craps always seems to generate and the only way to lose is not to play.
