Craps Betting Virtual
While the game does look complex and has its own extensive terminology, it is relatively simple to master. If, on the first roll, you shoot a 4, 5, 6,8, 9 or 10, that is your established
"box point. The Roll button will start a game of Craps by rolling the dice. Your wager will only be subtracted from your credits when you click roll. You can, however, bet with the shooter even while the game is in progress by placing a "Pass Line" bet without odds. Each player gets a chance to roll the dice, and the person rolling the dice is the shooter. There are quite a number of bets to choose from. This is called "taking odds". If any other number is rolled, a Point is established. In the simplest form of the game, you place a bet on the Pass Line and attempt to roll a 7. Making a Point: this is when the Shooter re-rolls the Point, once it has been established. We'll ignore the bad bets completely. If you succeed in doing this, the bet will pay and you can make another bet. Pass Line bets lose if the come-out roll is 2, 3 or 12. if the shooter doesn't automatically win or lose on the first roll, then the number becomes the Bastard, and that's why everyone wants to Nail the Bastard by rolling the same number again. While you are trying to make the point, you can add extra bets to the table. After
seeing all bets are down, the stickman pushes a few sets of dice to the shooter. 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. One person, the shooter (who may or may not be betting), rolls two dice. After you've bought chips, look for a big hockey puck on the table that says ON or OFF. Point: this is a number - four, five, six, eight, nine or ten, that the Shooter is
trying to roll to win the Pass Line bet. The objective is to bet whether the Shooter will roll a winning combination. Once a point has been established you cannot remove your bet from the table. Now, no matter what number has been rolled, if the shooter throws the dice so hard that they leave the table, he's said to be Banging the Babysitter, and has to give two of his chips to the youngest female player at the table. Craps is one of the more exciting and social table games played in casinos today. 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. Craps Out: this is when the Shooter rolls a two, three or twelve on the come-out roll. To bet with the shooter, you must place your bet in an area marked ""Pass Line"", before the new shooter rolls the dice. A 2, 3 or 12 loses. In the simplest form of the game you place a bet on the Pass Line and attempt to roll a seven. That players selects a pair of dice and is ready to roll them across the table
so that they hit the wall at the opposite end. Craps is a game of chance and is played on a large sunken table with a pair of dice that are thrown by the Shooter. This is where you place a bet on either the Pass Line or the Don't Pass Line and try to roll a 7 or 11. The boxman, who sits behind the
middle of the table, is the boss. " But if the shooter rolls a 3 or a 9, you lose, unless that 9 is made up of a 4 and a 5 if it's a 6 and a 3 instead, that's a Thunder Monkey, and it pays 3 to 2. Once the shooter establishes a "Point", you can then place an additional bet behind your "Pass Line" bet. The puck stays on this "Point" until the shooter either makes his "Point" or until he sevens out. Once the shooter establishes the "Point", the dealer will move this puck to that "Point" number and turn it the white side up. In the Coming Out phase, the objective is to roll a seven or an eleven, while betting on the Pass Line. The shooter's goal is to pass. The result of the roll determines which bets win or lose. In the simplest game you place a bet on the pass line and attempt to roll a seven. to get these great odds you have to make only the best bets and avoid the sucker bets. It is one of the few truly social games played in modern casinos, and one of the few played with dice. The basic idea behind Craps is to establish a "point" number and roll that number again before rolling a 7 (craps)

One or more players play against a casino in bank craps. The casino covers all player bets at a table and sets the odds on its payout. Players take turns rolling two dice. The dice are rolled by the "shooter". Bets on the shooter's dice rolls are made by other players. The game is played in rounds. The first roll of a new round is called the "come-out roll". A shooter bets the the table minimum on either the "Pass" line or the "Don't Pass" line. The stickman then presents the shooter with 5 dice. Two of them are picked. The come-out roll is over if the numbers 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, or 10 are rolled, and they become the Point. The shooter will now continue rolling until either the point is rolled or a seven. The pass line wins if the shooter rolls the point. The pass line loses if a seven is rolled. The dice is passed to the new shooter. For each round or each roll players can make a large number of bets. A casino craps requires four casino employees. The chips are guarded, the dealers are supervised and the coloring out players is handled by a boxman. Bets are collected and paid by two base dealers standing to either side of the boxman. Across the table from the boxman a stickman stands. The bets are taken, the results of each roll are announced, the dice are collected and the dealers are directed to pay winners by him. Each employee makes sure winners are paid out correctly. The dealers insist that the dice must be rolled with one hand and bounced off the far wall of the table. The game is kept fair with the help of these requirements. Informal craps playing is called street or private craps. There is no bank in street craps and in bank craps there is one. For the game to be played players' bets against each other are covered or faded. Depending on the laws and usage of money instead of chips street craps can be illegal. Street craps has many variations. Betting options offered by street craps are more simplified. To roll the dice the shooter makes a Pass or a Don't Pass bet. Another player must choose to cover the shooter to create a stake for the game to continue. The shooter will always be betted against by the person covering him. As long as there is another player willing to cover the shooter other players may make bets.
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