Craps Play Games
In the simplest game you place a bet on the pass line and attempt to roll a seven. The objective is to bet whether the Shooter will roll a winning combination. When the point has been established, an “ON” puck will be placed on the point. It's a fast and exciting game with lots of action. If you win the dealer will give you another chip, which you'll pick up, and let your original bet play again. The puck stays on this "Point" until the shooter either makes his "Point" or until he sevens out. If
another number is rolled initially, this number is called the point, and that
roll “Establishes the Point”. Other players may join in and place their own bets. To remove a bet from the table right-click on the stack of chips. 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 area is a strip on the table layout and it rims the table directly above the "Pass Line". The game is played with a pair of dice, which are thrown by the ‘shooter’, a player who is currently holding the dice. A new game in Craps begins with the ""Come Out"" roll. There are quite a number of bets to choose from. Craps is a game where you bet on the numbers you think the next roll of dice will produce. The Chip Size menu allows you to adjust the size of the increments of your wager. Craps has the deserved reputation of being the most entertaining and intense table game offered at casinos. This initial roll is called the “Come Out Roll”. It is white on one side and black on the other, and is used by the dealers to identify the "Point". There are quite a number of bets to choose from. A new game then begins with a new shooter. Any number so rolled is thereafter referred to as the "Point". The table is covered with a betting layout, where you can place chips to make different types of bets. 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. This is called "taking odds". Craps is one of the more exciting and social table games played in casinos today. We'll ignore the bad bets completely. In the simplest form of the game you place a bet on the Pass Line and attempt to roll a seven. 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. You are able to place all bets that you would find at a traditional land-based Casino. In other table games someone else is dealing you the cards or spinning the little marble. There are quite a number of bets to choose from when playing Craps. To bet with the shooter, you must place your bet in an area marked ""Pass Line"", before the new shooter rolls the dice. If the point is rolled before a 7, the "right" player wins, otherwise the "right" player loses. It probably won't be your turn to roll right away, and if you're still getting used to the game you can pass your turn (unless you're the only one playing, of course) Craps is an exciting game with the players all yelling and screaming. 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. Craps is a dice game, in which all bets are placed against the house. If, on the first roll, you make a
7 or 11, you've rolled a "natural" and you win. Craps is the dice game, and it's one of the bet bets in the casino. Many Craps bets offer very favorable odds to the player, and if you bet wisely, you can keep the house's advantage to a very small percentage (about 0.6% in the best cases) The game of Craps can be as simple or as complicated as you wish to make it. Craps is one of the few truly social games played in modern Casinos, and one of the few played with dice. 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. It's very player friendly with lots of options, strategic considerations and winning opportunities! The first roll is called the Come Out roll.

How do you behave at the craps table? There are craps etiquette rules besides the rules of the game itself. A certain etiquette is sticked to by the players. Place your bet while the dice are in the middle of the table. Before you make a bet have it clear in your mind what bets you are going to place. The dice is handled with one hand. The only way to change hands is to put the dice on the table, let go, then take them with the other hand. The opposite end of the table should be hit with the dice when they are thrown. A "no roll" is a more controllable short roll. If a die or both dice leave the table, it is also a "no roll". Dealers aren't allowed to touch the players or hand chips directly to a player, and vice versa. The cash should be laid down on the layout, taken by the dealer, and chips are placed in front of the player. Like any other table game, the casino can ask a player to leave the table or the casino for any reason. Without fear of offending anyone a player may pass the dice to the next player when offered the dice to shoot. One player must always be a shooter. The game is continued by betting pass line or don't pass line. Tip the dealers. Dealers don't get paid that much, particularly in the US. To to toss chips onto the table and say, "For the dealers" or "For the boys" is the most common way of tipping. A bet is also commonly put for the dealer. A bet that is part for the player and part for the dealers is a two-way bet. Usually, the dealers' bet is smaller than the player's bet, but it is appreciated. Changed dice in the middle of the roll are bad luck. If one or both dice leave the table, and the shooter doesn't want a new die he should immediately and loudly call "Same Dice!". Food, drinks, cigarettes, and other things should remain off the chip rail and shouldn't be held over the table. Leaving the table after a successful come-out roll is felt to be bad luck. Players' hands should be removed from the table area when the shooter is ready to roll. "Hands high, let 'em fly" or "dice are out, hands high" is often said by the stickman. Only when when the player is preparing to leave the table should the coloring up be done. It is generally permissible to color up and then decide to stay for one more round. But it is impolite to color up multiple times while at the same table.
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