Why Is There No Craps At Indian Casinos
Because the casino knows that if you play craps with cards, the house edge increases because there are only so many cards and pairings. With dice there are set odds and the house edge is lower. The real reason you came upon this form of craps is that California law prohibits casino game outcomes from being determined by dice (craps). Indian casinos must abide by those same regulations.
I live in California, our Indian casinos don't alow dice to determine the outcome, they use cards or have some type of video version of craps.
It isn't the tribes. It's the state.
Anyway, are Indian casinos in other states the same as California, or do they have traditional style craps games.
You can tell by the discussions here about Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods, among others, that almost all others use real dice.
But to answer your question, yes, other states use dice at their indian casinos. I posted a review about a week back about my craps experience at an Indian casino.
My days playing craps with dice are probably over!!!
It isn't the tribes. It's the state.
You can tell by the discussions here about Mohegan Sun and Foxwoods, among others, that almost all others use real dice.
I kind of figured that, typical California politician knowing what is in my best interest. I also had a feeling card craps was unique to California, aren't those casinos in Conneticut
There is a section on counting card craps.
Go to discountgambling.net.
There is a section on counting card craps.
Why Is There No Craps At Indian Casinos Near Me
Last time I played at Viejas, it had a continuous card shuffler I thought. Doesn't this invalidate card counting?
Go to discountgambling.net.
There is a section on counting card craps.
Oh never mind - I read more about it. Cool.
Who knew you could count a CSM. This is almost too good to be true.
Back in the early 1990s – which is a pretty long view for Arizona – the state signed its first gaming compacts with Indian reservations. As you might recall or might imagine, there was quite a bit of huffing and puffing about this from various opponents, including predictions of moral turpitude, widespread crime, slow dancing, gum-chewing and a loss of journalistic integrity. As it turned out, the main thing that happened was that lots of people went to the reservations to play the slots and life on the reservations was improved by the inflow of all that money. In 2002, voters approved a set of new rules for Indian casinos that permitted table games such as blackjack and poker, but not roulette or craps. I guess they thought that would be just a bit much.Get the Story: