Craps Betting Online Game
If the point is rolled before a 7, the "right" player wins, otherwise the "right" player loses. If you succeed in doing this, the bet will pay and you can make another bet. The house edge can be as low as 0.02%. This initial roll is called the “Come Out Roll”. Payoffs are made based on the number combination displayed when the dice come to rest. The Redo button reverses the effect of the Undo. Now, an Exploding Baby is when the same number comes up three times in a row, and the only thing worse than that is a Pregnant Midget. Establishing a "Point" is an event that happens as the immediate result of the "Come Out" roll, unless that "Come Out" roll results in 7, 11, 2, 3 or 12, in which case more rolls must be made until a "Point" is established. If
another number is rolled initially, this number is called the point, and that
roll “Establishes the Point”. Craps is usually played on a large sunken table. Craps is one of the more exciting and social table games played in casinos today. Shooter : The Player that rolls the dice. Any other number moves you into the bonus round. This begins a new series of rolls by that shooter and lasts for as long as that shooter continues to make winning rolls. The object of Craps is to predict the number displayed on the dice after the dice toss. There are four people actively running the game. If you bet on that roll then you win if any number below 8 comes up but you lose if the stickman starts coughing up blood. One person, the shooter (who may or may not be betting), rolls two dice. We'll ignore the bad bets completely. Depending on the bet placed by the player, the player is either betting with (Don't Pass Line bet) or against (Pass Line bet) the house winning. The significance of this device is only in tracking the game. When the shooter fails to make his or her "Point", the dice are then offered to the next player for a new "Come Out" roll and the game continues in the same manner. Come-Out Roll: this is any roll before a point is established. In addition to covering every player's bet, the
casino-banked craps game offers many other types of proposition bets. It is an attempt to win a Pass
Line bet by rolling 7 or 11. The Undo, Redo, Clear and Repeat buttons are provided to allow you to rapidly change the bets on the table. Before the new shooter rolls the dice on his or her "Come Out" roll, there are a variety of bets that can be made. The first roll in a Craps round is called the come out roll. When a new shooter is given the dice, his or her first roll is called the ""Come Out"" roll. After
seeing all bets are down, the stickman pushes a few sets of dice to the shooter. The table felt is divided up according to the pattern of a traditional craps table. To place a wager on any of these bet types simply left-click on the table to increase the size of your bet, and right-click to decrease. Now, stay with me here, because here's where it gets complicated: If you make a bet on the Pass Line, then you can't place any other bets except a Field Bet, Hardways, Big 6, Seven-Up, or Double Orange Latte. So you put a chip on the Pass Line, and then you want the shooter to roll a seven, which is called a Dead Leprechaun, so that's why you'll hear the other players screaming, "Dead Leprechaun, Dead Leprechaun! These are even money bets, may be made at any time and are always working. (That's two-hundredths of one percent, not two percent! Craps is the casino dice game. By clicking on a pile of chips you increase it's bet by the denomination of the current chip until there are 10 chips, the pile will then change it's denomination to the next highest chip size. A 2, 3 or 12 loses. There are two ways to bet on Craps, the "right" way, that is with the dice, or the "wrong" way, against the dice. These bets win if 6 or 8 is rolled and lose if 7 is rolled. The result of the roll determines which bets win or lose. This area is a strip on the table layout and it rims the table directly above the "Pass Line". In other table games someone else is dealing you the cards or spinning the little marble. In the simplest form of the game you place a bet on the Pass Line and attempt to roll a seven.

A game played by one or more players against a casino is bank craps. The casino covers all player bets at a table and sets the odds on its payout. Players roll two dice in turn. The player rolling the dice is called the "shooter". Other players make bets on the shooter's dice rolls. Rounds are played in the game. The first roll of a new round is called the "come-out roll". To begin, a player who wants to be a shooter must bet the table minimum on either the "Pass" line or the "Don't Pass" line. The stickman then presents the shooter with 5 dice. He picks two of them. If the Point numbers 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, or 10 are rolled, the come-out roll is over. Rolling is continued until until either the point or a seven is rolled. The pass line wins if the shooter rolls the point. The pass line loses if the shooter rolls a seven. Then the next player (clockwise) becomes the shooter. For each round or each roll players can make a large number of bets. There are four casino employees in a casino craps. The chips are guarded, the dealers are supervised and the coloring out players is handled by a boxman. Two base dealers stand to either side of the boxman and collect and pay bets. A stickman stands directly across the table from the boxman. He takes bets in the center of the table, announces the results of each roll, collects the dice with a wooden stick, and directs the base dealers to pay winners from bets in the center of the table. Each employee makes sure the other is paying out winners correctly. The dealers usually insist that the shooter roll with one hand and that the dice bounce off the far wall of the table. These requirements help to keep the game fair. Informal craps playing is called street or private craps. There is no bank in street craps and in bank craps there is one. Players bet against each other, cover or fade each other's bets. If money is used instead of chips street craps is an illegal form of gambling. Street craps has many variations. Betting options offered by street craps are more simplified. A Pass or a Don't Pass bet is made by the shooter if he wants to roll the dice. For the game to continue the shooter's stake must be covered by another player. The person covering the shooter will always bet against the shooter. Any bets are made by other players once the shooter is covered and there is a player willing to cover.
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