The banker wins all ties, with the exception of a 'Blackjack' roll with 2 dice. That's an automatic winner. Note: A Blackjack score is not the same as a total score of 21. A dealer can tie a '21' and win, but not a Blackjack. Hi there I've read a sentence lie this:'If you go to a blackjack table and you're dealt a sixteen and the bank has a ten, the dealer has one card yet to be revealed. Your chances of succeeding are extremely low.' I thought 'the bank' in this sentence mean 'the banker'. But isn't 'the banker' means the same as 'the dealer'? Try Deal or No Deal - Blackjack online for free in demo mode with no download or no registration required. What is Blackjack Banker System All About, and What Can It Help You Do? This system is an advanced Blackjack betting system that is, in practical, very easy to apply and make money with. It turns this game that some people say is based on luck into one that you can profit from consistently with good skills.
4 - What are the blackjack rules you'll be following? Who is the Dealer / Banker? In some home blackjack games, the dealer / banker can be designated to one individual who will continue to be the dealer throughout the night. The biggest problem with this is its expensive.
Deal or No Deal Blackjack is a blackjack game by Red Tiger Gaming where the player can surrender with any initial two cards. However, the surrender value, or 'Banker Offer' varies significantly, according to the player's two cards and the dealer's up card.
Following are the blackjack rules followed by the game, before considering the 'Banker Offer' feature. It is assumed the reader is already familiar with the fundamental blackjack rules.
In addition, the game will offer the player a surrender option with every initial two player cards and dealer up card. The offer is made before the dealer peeks for blackjack.
Following is the proper basic strategy for the rules above. If the table calls for doubling, and you have three or more cards, then hit, except with a soft 18, stand.
Regarding the Banker Offers, always decline them.
According to my blackjack house edge calculator, the house edge under the rules above is 0.38%.
To analyze the Banker Offers, I recorded 31 £10 hands and recorded the offer made and the actual value of the hand, using my blackjack hand calculator. The following table shows both as well as the ratio of the Banker Offer to the actual value of the hand.
Player | Dealer | Banker Offer | Fair Value | Ratio |
---|---|---|---|---|
2,8 | 3 | £13.90 | £14.23 | 97.66% |
5,5 | 3 | £13.90 | £14.23 | 97.66% |
6,8 | 3 | £7.20 | £7.54 | 95.52% |
6,10 | 10 | £4.00 | £4.30 | 93.01% |
3,6 | 10 | £7.50 | £7.83 | 95.78% |
7,10 | 10 | £5.00 | £5.37 | 93.19% |
4,6 | A | £7.10 | £7.45 | 95.34% |
Q,9 | A | £8.60 | £8.89 | 96.74% |
A,6 | A | £5.30 | £5.50 | 96.29% |
6,7 | 5 | £8.10 | £8.40 | 96.39% |
2,2 | 5 | £11.40 | £11.79 | 96.67% |
J,3 | 2 | £6.70 | £7.04 | 95.22% |
8,10 | 10 | £7.30 | £7.62 | 95.81% |
A,3 | 10 | £7.60 | £8.00 | 95.05% |
J,7 | 10 | £5.00 | £5.37 | 93.19% |
9,9 | 7 | £13.60 | £14.00 | 97.17% |
4,Q | 7 | £6.40 | £6.75 | 94.85% |
2,K | 7 | £7.50 | £7.87 | 95.25% |
A,5 | 6 | £11.50 | £11.87 | 96.90% |
9,5 | 3 | £7.10 | £7.50 | 94.72% |
Q,2 | 3 | £7.30 | £7.69 | 94.91% |
7,J | 3 | £8.50 | £8.82 | 96.32% |
5,8 | 6 | £8.10 | £8.48 | 95.51% |
5,5 | 6 | £15.70 | £16.04 | 97.91% |
Q,Q | 2 | £16.00 | £16.37 | 97.71% |
8,A | 2 | £13.50 | £13.89 | 97.19% |
10,2 | 2 | £7.10 | £7.48 | 94.86% |
8,J | 9 | £7.80 | £8.14 | 95.78% |
7,6 | 9 | £5.70 | £6.07 | 93.92% |
9,10 | 9 | £12.50 | £12.85 | 97.26% |
10,A | 10 | £23.50 | £23.89 | 98.36% |
The above above shows the Banker Offer is always worth less than the actual value of the hand. The ratio of Banker Offer to actual value ranged from 93.01% to 98.36%, with an average of 95.88%. Thus, the house edge of the Banker Offers averaged 4.12%. Remember, the house edge of the base game is 0.38%, so I would recommend declining the Banker Offers every time.
In these games, instead of all the players competing against each other there is one player, the banker, who competes against each of the other players individually. These are typically gambling games, played for cash or chips. They are often played in casinos but many are also played as home games in which case they are sometimes played for tokens such as matchsticks or sweets (candy) rather than for money.
Casino games are often designed in such a way that the banker has a slight advantage over the other players. In this case the banker usually plays on behalf of the casino. Although players may win or lose, in the long run the banker will make a profit for the casino. Games with an advantage for the banker may also be played as home games. In this case players take turns to be banker, so that no one has an unfair advantage.
There are some banking games in which the payouts exactly reflect the chances of winning, so that the banker has no advantage. When this type of game is used as a casino game, the casino needs to make an hourly charge, or take a proportion of the winnings as a fee (sometimes called the rake), in order to be profitable.
In some casino games, it is traditional for the players to take turns to be the banker. In this case too, since they get no profit from the game itself, the casino will charge a fee for running the game.
Gambling games played with cards or tiles in which there is no banker, but the players compete with each other on an equal basis, are listed elsewhere according to their mechanism. There are showdown games in which players simply compare hands to decide the winner, vying games (including poker) in which players first bet on who has the best hand, with the possibility of bluffing, and partition games, in which each player's hand is divided into parts, which are then compared with the corresponding parts of other players' hands.
Banking games played with cards or tiles fall into four main types.
The cards have point values. The banker and each of the players has a hand of cards, and adds up their values. The player wins if the player's total is closer to the target than the banker's total.
In these games the result depends on comparing single cards. Players will win or lose their stakes depending on whether certain cards match, or whether one card is larger or smaller than another.
In these games players try to form card combinations, typically similar to poker or brag hands, and win or lose according to how good their combination is, or whether it beats the combination held by the banker.
In these games, players must decide how to divide their hands into two or more parts, each of which is compared with the corresponding part of the banker's hand.
Other partition games in which the players compete against each other rather than each against the banker are listed on the partition games page.