Free Craps Casino Games
In casino craps, the players place their bets and the casino bank
"covers" them. While the game does look complex and has its own extensive jargon like ‘boxcars’, ‘hard ways’ and ‘horn bet’ it is a relatively simple game to master. Short summary: Right after you place your bet, rolling a 7 or 11 wins, while a 2, 3, or 12 loses. Each throw of the dice is called a "roll". 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. The Roll button will start a game of Craps by rolling the dice. The only way to win at this point is to double down and hope that the shooter rolls an 11 before two non-consecutive Thunder Monkeys. Craps is a game where players bet either that the shooter will make his "Point" or that he or she will not make their "Point". They can be set by clicking the mouse in the desired area or using the Big6/8 Button. If any other number is rolled, a Point is established. A "Come Out" roll can be made only when the previous shooter fails to make a winning roll more correctly known as "not making the "Point"" or "seven out". Other players may join in and place their own bets. You don't even have to understand what's going on, though it's probably more fun if you do. When a new shooter is given the dice, his or her first roll is called the ""Come Out"" roll. In other table games someone else is dealing you the cards or spinning the little marble. The object of Craps is to predict the number displayed on the dice after the dice toss. If
another number is rolled initially, this number is called the point, and that
roll “Establishes the Point”. The players take turns rolling the dice. You lose, however, if you roll a seven before making
your box point. Rolling any of these numbers on the "Come Out" roll is called "establishing the "Point". 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. On the "Come Out" roll, the "Pass Line" bet wins if the shooter rolls a 7 or an 11. The first roll in a Craps round is called the come out roll. If a 7 is rolled you lose your bet. Shooter : The Player that rolls the dice. A new game in Craps begins with the ""Come Out"" roll. Each player gets a chance to roll the dice, and the person rolling the dice is the shooter. When the point has been established, an “ON” puck will be placed on the point. After the point is rolled the dice will be rolled continuously until the same point is rolled again or a 7. To remove a bet from the table right-click on the stack of chips. The game is played by tossing the dice from one of the short ends of the table to the other (make sure that both die hit the opposite side wall of the table) Once the shooter establishes the "Point", the dealer will move this puck to that "Point" number and turn it the white side up. On the other hand a total of 2, 3, 7, 11, or 12 on the come out roll immediately ends the round. The boxman, who sits behind the
middle of the table, is the boss. The basic idea behind Craps is to establish a "point" number and roll that number again before rolling a 7 (craps) In the bonus round, rolling the number that got you into the bonus round wins, while a 7 loses, and any other number is irrelevant. This begins a new series of rolls by that shooter and lasts for as long as that shooter continues to make winning rolls. Placing your chips halfway over one of the two lines framing the "Pass Line" area does this. In the simplest form of the game, you place a bet on the Pass Line and attempt to roll a 7. The so-called "Pass Line" is a strip on the table layout marked by two lines roughly two inches wide and it rims the entire table layout across from the Box Man. If you roll four, five, six, eight, nine or ten instead, a Point is established. You are able to place all bets that you would find at a traditional land-based Casino. A 7 or 11, or natural, on the come out roll wins for a right bettor.

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