Jun 06, 2017 As the longest continuously running casino in all of Las Vegas, the El Cortez has been in the blackjack business since 1941. That sense of history may appeal to a certain subset of players, but everybody who enjoys the game should have El Cortez on their radar.
Players looking to elevate their blackjack game can use blackjack software programs that can simulate scenarios so players can improve their game with limited risk. Blackjack software can also be used for running simulations on rule variations.
Below we have chosen 3 of the most popular blackjack software programs: Casino Vérité, blackjack 678 and blackjack gold.
Website: qfit.com
Probably the best or at least the most popular blackjack software out there – Casino Vérité from QFIT has managed to gain the respect and reference of most of the biggest blackjack pros, critiques, and informational casino resources.
These include names such as Arnold Snyder, Mike Shackleford, and Donald Schlesinger among many others, as well as acquiring numerous five-star awards from Windows shareware websites and organizations.
These big names referencing and recommending Casino Vérité software simply adds to its credibility for ones’ path to becoming a blackjack professional, or at least an avid player.
The software is basically done in a way to simulate the exact play at any casino, down to card counting for beginners to pros.
For instance, it covers the complete basics of card counting for beginners, the essence, and lots of practice sessions.
For intermediate to high-level players, they will find the ability to practice on specific issues only, such as weaknesses, side counts, cover strategies, increasing speed and accuracy on the subject and much more. It also keeps records of your sessions to help you out more identifying those weak plays, and ultimately improving your game.
For tournament players, it also carries tournament modes just for this type of games.
Unlike most other programs out there, Vérité uses a 3D view of the table to add to its realistic casino play and simulations. It also carries a selection of screen resolutions instead of stretching them, keeping the graphics crisp and clean.
Not only that, but Casino Vérité holds an immense selection of blackjack rule variations and game variations, such as Blackjack Switch, Spanish 21, and many more. Actually, if you ever want to mimic a game found at a specific casino, or with a specific rule or situation, Casino Vérité will be able to reproduce this with its worldwide casino database.
Lastly, you will not need to worry about knowing how to use it, as this software is quite user-friendly, with a virtual assistant walking you through the steps, and well as several pages of well written and easy to follow help tips.
Here is a quick glimpse at their six applications:
Complete blackjack practice and drills for all levels.
A cheaper version of the above, as it only holds half the features.
For Beginner and intermediate players only
High-speed simulations and calculations
For higher lever and serious players only
An even more advanced application for pros wishing to expand their gameplay
Advanced practices and strategies
For Shuffle tracking and Ace tracking
Players should have some basic knowledge of this first
For advances players interested in shuffle tracking, hole-carding, ace tracking, etc.
Blackjack Gold, unlike many other programs out, there is one of the few that is both Windows and Mac OSX compatible, allowing Mac users to take in the action of blackjack games as a professional.
As many programs out there though, it does provide similar features. You will be able to simulate numerous real-life casino games and plays by actually customizing your games. For instance, you will be able to choose the number of players accompanying you on the table (up to 7 players though), as well as choosing the minimums and maximums of the table, card shuffling options, decks, and even the dealer’s voice and the appearance of the players.
The options go on and on, but you get the point – it is quite a customizable product for the players, which is great as you will be able to try-out and practice numerous variations of the games and simulations that will help you at the tables and all the different offline casinos (especially since each casino usually has different blackjack rules, limits, and so forwards).
Within the variations, you will be able to try different blackjack games too, such as Spanish 21, European Blackjack, Super Sevens, and many more – again, from different casinos in the United States and with different levels depending on your expertise (beginner to professional).
The up to 7 players can actually be human and not just computer, so obviously you could train with your friends or team – after all, you could all practice the strategies together card counting, and even alter the professional betting strategies to become an even more thorough player.
A great starting software for you and your team members, beginners or pros, Mac or PC.
This software is provided by the Gypsy King Software group, and they also cater to other casino games, such as roulette, video poker, craps, poker, and many others – so you might want to check them out in case you want to spread around the casino, after dominating blackjack of course.
I analyze all sorts of blackjack strategies and rank them for your fun and profit.
In every single movie about Las Vegas and the gangsters that run it, some character says to another character, “The house always wins.”
Yet that doesn’t stop all of us from trying to beat the casino. Specifically blackjack. We all think we’re better than blackjack.
We’re not, of course. But we think we are. I compiled this list of 11 popular strategies for beating blackjack and ranked them here, starting with the least effective and building toward the most effective.
I’ve seen tons of blackjack superstitions. None of these actually do anything — but either do lucky shirts, avoiding black cats, turning off the light switch three times to keep Charlie from dying, or any of the other day-to-day superstitions people swear by.
So it’s not going to change your blackjack fortunes if you violate your superstitions — even if you let new players enter during a shoe… you don’t bother saying “Nice hit” to someone who gets a six on a 15… you wish yourself good luck on your first-card ace… you tap twice instead of scratching the felt to hit… or forget your lucky cowboy hat. Gamblor is immune to superstition.
It seems that most people who sit down at a blackjack table have a rough understanding of textbook blackjack strategy. At least on the most basic level. The “gut feelings” strategy is a mix of playing with basic blackjack strategy but also having feelings. For example: “I’m going to stay on this 16, I just know the next card is a 10.” (I’ve seen my friend Bruce almost attack people for that statement. More than once.)
The problem here, from a mathematical perspective — aka my favorite perspective — is that blackjack strategy is constructed to give you an edge if you adhere to it without deviation and play for a long, long time. It’s like a thousand monkeys on a thousand typewriters — eventually they’re going to write A Tale of Two Cities. But as soon as you deviate from the strategy for a gut feeling, that’s like telling your monkeys that they’re now trying to accidentally write Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue: An American Life.
I have three different levels of card counting on this list, because not all card counting is created equal. Some methods are so basic that you can learn them in 15 minutes. Some take months or years of practice.
Easy card counting might give you a small bump. One strategy like this is called ace/five — that’s where you start with the number zero, add one for every five dealt and subtract one for every ace. If the count is more than two, you double your previous bet. If the count is less than two, you bet the minimum. It’s simple, and marginally effective across a large data set.
Another easy card counting style is the famed “I feel like I’ve seen a lot of big cards” strategy. This is the one where you’re paying like 80 percent attention, but you feel like you’ve seen a lot of big cards come out already so you scale back your bets. This somewhat resembles wearing shorts outside in February because you feel like there have been so many snowy days that some sun is due.
This isn’t necessarily a winning strategy but more of an “avoid losing” strategy. Simply put: If you stand up and walk away every time there’s a dealer switch and an elderly female Korean assassin takes over your table, it will probably save you thousands of dollars in your lifetime.
Bet incrementing is like card counting without the card counting. It’s more like streak counting. There are different systems but they all basically come down to this: If you’re winning, keep increasing your bet; if you’re losing, don’t increase your bet.
This certainly helps avoid the break-even rut that blackjack can fall into — where you sit there for hours and never swing more than 25 percent or so from your buy-in. With incrementing, you’re either blowing money quickly or raking it in quickly.
But it’s not really a system to beat the house… just one to help you channel your luck. Incrementing coupled with counting can actually increase your winning percentage (or, more accurately, shave a small amount off the house edge). But incrementing without counting is like having sexual relations with multiple people and eschewing condoms until you catch an STD, then going back to condoms again.
I put this in the middle of the list because it can go either way. If you spend hours going from casino to casino searching for a rookie dealer who might occasionally expose the very bottom burn card, that’s ineffective and inefficient cheating.
If you hide cards in your sleeve or try to subtlety double your bet when you get a good hand, those are more effective cheating strategies. Sure, you’ll end up getting dragged into a windowless room in the bowels of the casino and getting beat — fittingly — with a blackjack. But you’ll win some serious cash in the process.
In most of the big Vegas casinos you can’t do this anymore — the dealer doesn’t shuffle, he just puts the cards in a machine that automatically shuffles them. (Or, if you’re more of a conspiracy theorist, that sequences them to make sure you all get screwed.)
But if you’re playing blackjack and the dealer is manually shuffling, this actually can be moderately effective. You have to pay detailed attention to the sequence that the cards come out, because you’re looking for clusters. Maybe you try to remember the number and suit of the two cards that lead up to every ace. You expect that, during a human shuffle, some of those clusters will stay together — and you might have a little edge in knowing when the aces are coming.
It requires a lot of concentration, but might actually help you make a better decision on one or two hands every two or three shoes. It’s a long-term play. Continuing the analogy motif of this list, it’s like getting three green shells on the first lap in Mario Kart 64 and holding them indefinitely, hoping that you’ll be in a situation eventually where they’ll benefit you.
Basic strategy is the calling card of blackjack — if you play with proper strategy, blackjack gives you the best odds in the casino over time. (People forget the “over time” aspect. We’re a culture that freaks out over small sample sizes. They’re the only thing keeping Around the Horn on the air.)
And over time, basic strategy really can make a difference — infinite computer simulations have proven it. But you need to have the discipline to hit 12 and 13 against a 2… hit soft 18 against a 9, 10 or ace… split 8s against a 10 even if you’re on a cold streak… and refuse to take even money for blackjacks. Every single time you play, with no exceptions, for your entire life.
This is the kind of card counting that the common man can learn and try to employ. You don’t need an entire team of MIT-educated math geniuses to work as spotters and helpers and trainers to make it work. (It’d be hard to get that team together anyway, what with them knowing they’d be whitewashed if a movie was made about your adventures.)
These medium strategies are more advanced than the counting strategies I talked about earlier. Here you might try something like the current “hot” counting style, called the Zen Count. (You subtract one for an ace; add one for a 2, 3 or 7; add two for a 4, 5 or 6; and subtract two for a ten.) This requires practice and concentration, *might* get you kicked out of a casino but probably not, and will give you more of an advantage than you’re used to.
Of course, if you’re doing this, you can’t really drink — so that’s a $6-$32 per hour loss, depending on the efficiency of your waitress and your willingness to consume Long Island iced teas in the middle of the afternoon. So make sure to factor that in.
These are the card counting systems you would see in movies like 21 and others. (No, I can’t actually name others, I just assume there are others.) Basically, you and your genius friends develop an advanced card counting strategy. Then you all watch and card count different tables and signal each other when a table is about to start paying off. The money guy goes to that table, bets a ton, then gets the hell out as soon as the pit bosses start whispering to each other and casting furtive glances in your direction.
On the downside, this is the kind of thing that casinos are on the lookout for and that might only exist in fantasy at this point. On the upside, if you do choose this method, you get to wear cool disguises and play different characters at the table! So if you and your friends from differential calculus class started an improv troupe, you were born for this.
(Side note: I bet that improv troupe would have a kitschy name like “RDRR” or “Nothing Derivative” or “Kristen Cavalieri’s Principle.”)
Show me the money! Feel the need for speed! I want the truth! You’re glib!
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