Baccarat Chemin de Fer Policies and Method

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Baccarat Banque Standards

Baccarat chemin de fer is gambled on with eight decks in a shoe. Cards under ten are valued at face value while at the same time 10, J, Q, K are zero, and A is one. Bets are placed on the ‘banker’, the ‘player’, or for a tie (these aren’t actual people; they simply represent the two hands to be dealt).

Two hands of two cards are then given to the ‘bank’ and ‘gambler’. The value for each hand is the sum of the cards, but the beginning digit is ignored. For instance, a hand of 5 and 6 has a value of one (5 plus 6 equals 11; ignore the 1st ‘1′).

A third card could be given out depending on the rules below:

- If the gambler or bank gets a score of eight or 9, the two players stay.

- If the player has five or less, he takes a card. Players otherwise stand.

- If the player stands, the banker takes a card on a value lower than five. If the gambler hits, a chart is employed to figure out if the house stands or takes a card.

Baccarat Banque Odds

The larger of the two scores wins. Winning bets on the bank pay out 19:20 (equal money less a 5% commission. The Rake is recorded and paid off when you quit the game so be sure to still have money left over just before you quit). Winning bets on the player pays out at 1 to 1. Winning bets for a tie typically pay 8 to 1 but sometimes nine to one. (This is a poor bet as a tie occurs less than one in every 10 hands. Be wary of putting money on a tie. Although odds are substantially greater for 9:1 versus 8:1)

Wagered on properly punto banco gives generally good odds, aside from the tie bet of course.

Baccarat Chemin de Fer Method

As with all games baccarat chemin de fer has a handful of familiar false impressions. One of which is the same as a misunderstanding in roulette. The past is not an indicator of events about to happen. Keeping track of past results on a page of paper is a bad use of paper and an affront to the tree that was cut down for our paper desires.

The most familiar and almost certainly the most successful scheme is the one-three-two-six plan. This method is deployed to pump up profits and limit risk.

Start by placing one chip. If you succeed, add 1 more to the two on the game table for a grand total of 3 chips on the second bet. Should you win you will have 6 on the table, take away 4 so you are left with 2 on the 3rd wager. If you come away with a win on the third round, deposit 2 to the four on the game table for a grand total of six on the 4th bet.

If you do not win on the initial bet, you take a loss of 1. A win on the first wager followed by a hit on the second creates a hit of 2. Success on the initial two with a loss on the third gives you with a profit of 2. And wins on the 1st three with a hit on the 4th means you break even. Winning all four rounds leaves you with 12, a profit of ten. This means you are able to give up the second round 5 times for every favorable run of 4 bets and still break even.

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