Thursday, April 1, 2010

Which Casino has the Best Gambling Rules for You ?

We all like different casino games, some like slots, others table games etc





From your time in Vegas, what casino had the best rules for how you like to gamble ?





For me it was the Palazzo. I loved their blackjack rules. I like their casino in general



Which Casino has the Best Gambling Rules for You ?


Palazzo and Venetian do have excellent blackjack rules. The only thing that bothers me a little is that shoe games are 8-deck (instead of 6). Subscribers to the CBJN on www.bj21.com know that Wynn, MGM, Mirage and Mandalay Bay have the best rules at blackjack. Luxor has a great double-deck pitch game. Downtown the best game is at El Cortez.





If I HAVE to play at a Harrah%26#39;s/Caesars casino, I%26#39;ll play at Bally%26#39;s or Paris where late surrender is an option.



Which Casino has the Best Gambling Rules for You ?


I liked playing at Wynn. Good rules even on the $10 dollar tables opposed to Planet Hollywood where I also played this trip. The Tropicana is good to but the Wynn definitely smells better!




Station casinos for BJ, VP and $5 table games. Full pay Dueces Wild are getting hard to come by, but Green Valley Ranch, Palace, Sunset and Red Rock all still have them.You won%26#39;t find them on the strip at all.





Sam%26#39;s Town is good, too, but so many locals play there that you can%26#39;t get a machine at night, or on Tues/Wed due to special point bonus days.




I like Wynn, but it%26#39;s good games are expensive. I agree with Darren that MGM, Mirage and MB have, by far, the best strip games. Although MB%26#39;s rarely goes under $25.




Could someone please elaborate on the ';good'; rules at Wynn, Palazzo, etc.?





I assume the better rules include ability to surrender, double after split, resplit aces, etc.





Can anyone give more details on the better rules at these casinos? Thanks.




hkj:





The casinos mentioned have blackjack games where you can double down on any two cards, double after splitting, late surrender, re-split aces and the dealer stands on soft 17. The s17 rule can be pricey as far as minimum bets go. It only takes $15 to play a s17 game at MGM... $25 at Mirage and Mandalay Bay...$100 at Venetian (not sure about Wynn).





As far as double-deck, for $25 you can get a s17 game where you can double after splitting at Luxor and Mirage. The house edge is this game is 0.19 percent compared to 0.53 percent for the Harrah/Caesars joints and most of the downtown casinos where they hit soft 17 and you can%26#39;t double after splitting.






Thanks, Darren. Apreciate the info.

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