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37 members have voted

mustangsally
mustangsally
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October 5th, 2014 at 11:43:29 AM permalink
simple question I can not find the answer to easily

====================================
What roll is a craps shooter most likely to 7 out on?
(not crapless craps, that is another question)

I know it is out there

in other words,
what roll has the highest probability of being "the 7out roll"
given we have a NEW shooter that has just selected their two dice
======================================

btw, this is for all craps shooters (random, DI, RNG and machine)

also, the average number of rolls for a shooter's hand has been calculated close to 8.5
so that is not the answer

vote and what you thinks if you wants to

answer
note:
the first come out roll by a new shooter is counted, even with a probability of 0 that it can be the 7out roll
so for those that did not count the first roll, then roll #2 is the roll.
But we do count the first roll because it is roll #1

1) #3
2) followed close by #2
3) in 3rd place is #4

the list
Top 10 rolls to 7out on in order
{3,2,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11}
Roll7out on
00
10
20.111111111
30.116769547
40.104766804
50.091223629
60.078918038
70.068166764
80.058852758
90.05080065
100.043844137
110.037836136


the math in my last post on page 3
https://wizardofvegas.com/forum/gambling/craps/19743-what-roll-is-a-craps-shooter-most-likely-to-7-out-on/3/#post402565
takes you there

Sally
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DJTeddyBear
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October 5th, 2014 at 11:55:59 AM permalink
According to the first question answered in this Ask The Wizard: https://wizardofodds.com/ask-the-wizard/craps/odds-bets/
Quote:

The average shooter throws the dice 8.53 times, including the seven-out roll. For more information on that, visit my odds table for the probability of every number of throws from 2 to 200.

I invented a few casino games. Info: http://www.DaveMillerGaming.com/ ————————————————————————————————————— Superstitions are silly, childish, irrational rituals, born out of fear of the unknown. But how much does it cost to knock on wood? 😁
petroglyph
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October 5th, 2014 at 12:01:46 PM permalink
I voted 3 and that includes the co roll, I believe ME answered it once but I can't find it either
mustangsally
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October 5th, 2014 at 12:32:59 PM permalink
Quote: petroglyph

I voted 3 and that includes the co roll, I believe ME answered it once but I can't find it either

I found my answers on my computer but is seems that one can also find the Wizard's table by searching

"probability of a 7 out"

ok,
I would think a thread at WoV would show up

a start
For the probability of the 7out being the 2nd roll

it would be the chance of setting a point on the come out roll or the 1st roll
that is easy = 24/36 or 2/3
and the very next roll (the 2nd roll) being the 7 out (6/36 or 1/6) yea!

so 2/3 * 1/6 = 2/18 = 1/9 = abouts 11.11%

now to see if we can beat that and if yes, by how much
on to roll 3
after
the
Angles win Game #3

Sally

===================================================
added
for roll 2 and 3 it is not difficult to calculate the ways to 7 out
It gets wilder after 3, imo, so maybe that method should be the chance of not a 7 out on the Nth roll and subtract from 1

example
the sequences for roll 2 are easy
4,7
5,7
6,7
8,7
9,7
10,7
the number of ways (out of a total of 36*36)
4,7 = 3*6
5,7 = 4*6
6,7 = 5*6
8,7 = 5*6
9,7 = 4*6
10,7 = 3*6
= 144/1296

the sequences for 3 rolls that 7out on that 3rd roll are
2,4,7
2,5,7
2,6,7
2,8,7
2,9,7
2,10,7
3,4,7
3,5,7
3,6,7
3,8,7
3,9,7
3,10,7
4,2,7
4,3,7
4,5,7
4,6,7
4,8,7
4,9,7
4,10,7
4,11,7
4,12,7
5,2,7
5,3,7
5,4,7
5,6,7
5,8,7
5,9,7
5,10,7
5,11,7
5,12,7
6,2,7
6,3,7
6,4,7
6,5,7
6,8,7
6,9,7
6,10,7
6,11,7
6,12,7
7,4,7
7,5,7
7,6,7
7,8,7
7,9,7
7,10,7
8,2,7
8,3,7
8,4,7
8,5,7
8,6,7
8,9,7
8,10,7
8,11,7
8,12,7
9,2,7
9,3,7
9,4,7
9,5,7
9,6,7
9,8,7
9,10,7
9,11,7
9,12,7
10,2,7
10,3,7
10,4,7
10,5,7
10,6,7
10,8,7
10,9,7
10,11,7
10,12,7
11,4,7
11,5,7
11,6,7
11,8,7
11,9,7
11,10,7
12,4,7
12,5,7
12,6,7
12,8,7
12,9,7
12,10,7
==================================================
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Wizard
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October 5th, 2014 at 12:34:48 PM permalink
I voted for 2.
"For with much wisdom comes much sorrow." -- Ecclesiastes 1:18 (NIV)
kenarman
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October 5th, 2014 at 12:41:14 PM permalink
It would seem to me like it has to be the 2nd roll. Every roll after that would have already lost the number of rolls that went out on the 2nd roll and that seems at first glance to me like they would have to have lesser odds than the 2nd roll.
Be careful when you follow the masses, the M is sometimes silent.
mustangsally
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October 5th, 2014 at 2:24:10 PM permalink
Quote: kenarman

It would seem to me like it has to be the 2nd roll. Every roll after that would have already lost the number of rolls that went out on the 2nd roll and that seems at first glance to me like they would have to have lesser odds than the 2nd roll.

this sounds sound to me

OK, because I have real $$$$.$$ bet on them Angels tonight, meaning I may not feel very well, mentally, if they play like they played the first 2 games of their Series

===========================================
for 3rd roll 7out
the sequences I listed in my last post add up to
5448
46656 = 36*36*36 (the number of ways the dice can roll in 3 rolls)

anyone care to do this a different way?
I have a few other ways too that work well

so far I have 1/9 for 2nd roll

3rd roll = 5448 / 46656

oh,
1/9 = 5184 / 46656
agree?


Sally
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odiousgambit
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October 5th, 2014 at 2:55:19 PM permalink
somebody has to explain to me what I am missing. Once the point has been established, no roll is more likely than another to be a 7, right?

So maybe you mean "at what point [roll], once point established, is the likelihood of 7-out greater than [say] 90% chance of having occurred on that roll or before"?
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
Wizard
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October 5th, 2014 at 3:03:23 PM permalink
I view this kind of like this problem:

You roll an ordinary six-sided die once to determine the "point." You then keep rolling the die until you roll the point again. What is the expected number of total rolls? Although the mean is 7, the median is only 2.
"For with much wisdom comes much sorrow." -- Ecclesiastes 1:18 (NIV)
DJTeddyBear
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October 5th, 2014 at 3:06:00 PM permalink
Quote: Wizard

I voted for 2.

That's kinda surprising since you specify 8.5 in the Ask The Wiz that I linked above.

Let's not forget that come out rolls of 2, 3, 7, 11 and 12 will occur 12 out of 36 times. Follow that with another 12/36 chance of a non-point roll, etc.

Although I agree that the way the question is posed, 8.5 doesn't sound right, I voted 4.
I invented a few casino games. Info: http://www.DaveMillerGaming.com/ ————————————————————————————————————— Superstitions are silly, childish, irrational rituals, born out of fear of the unknown. But how much does it cost to knock on wood? 😁
RS
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October 5th, 2014 at 3:21:39 PM permalink
154th roll.

Bare with me for a sec:

7, the average number to be roll times 7 gets us forty nine.

Still with me?

7*7=49

Dice are cubes so that doesn't make sense.

RS doesn't like cubes. Circles and spheres are much better!

Still following?

According to my simulation, the number pi ~ 3.141592, often used in calculating dimensions on circles and spheres is the key.

7 * 7 * 3.141592 = 153.938008

My simulation wasn't able to round that complex number, so I had to do it by hand.
Oh what fun!

According to my math by hand, I rounded 153.938008 to get 154.


The shooter is most likely to 7 out on the 154'th roll.


Math fun!!
RS
mustangsally
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October 5th, 2014 at 4:13:00 PM permalink
Quote: odiousgambit

somebody has to explain to me what I am missing. Once the point has been established, <snip> <snip>

from my first post here

in other words,
what roll has the highest probability of being "the 7out roll"

given we have a NEW shooter that has just selected their two dice

or in other words,
the length of the shooter's hand
the probability of a seven-out on exactly that Nth roll


The shooter could do this
7,7,11,3,7, 7,7,7,12,11, 3,2,7,7,7, 4,5,6,7
one sequence, one shooter
the last 7 is the 7out = the 19th roll

Sally
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eagledice
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October 5th, 2014 at 6:09:27 PM permalink
I voted 3. Just spent week in Las Vegas. Combination work and pleasure. I would say based on my many times at the craps tables, 3 was the magic number.
petroglyph
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October 5th, 2014 at 6:32:04 PM permalink
Quote: eagledice

I voted 3. Just spent week in Las Vegas. Combination work and pleasure. I would say based on my many times at the craps tables, 3 was the magic number.



Just enough time to get your odds out there
Doc
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October 5th, 2014 at 6:50:16 PM permalink
I voted for roll #2, and here is my rationale.

Let N represent the roll number that sets the point that eventually falls to a 7-out. There may or may not have been prior rolls related to points that were made successfully or to non-point come-out rolls.

Let X represent a number of additional rolls after N. What is the probability that the 7-out occurs on roll N+X? I believe that it is:

P = (1/6) * (5/6)^(X-1).

It should be evident that this probability decreases uniformly with increasing X, so that the single highest probability is for X = 1, so that the 7-out occurs on roll N+1.

Now, the question is what value of N has the highest probability. Well, the probability that the very first roll sets the very first point number is 2/3. The probability that some later roll (call it roll Y) sets the very first point is:

P = (2/3) * (1/3)^(Y-1).

This, too, uniformly decreases with increasing Y, so the very first point is more likely to be set on the very first roll than on any other.

There is less than 50% probability that the first point is made successfully, with the probability dependent upon the point number. With that being the case, the second point has less than a 50% chance of even being established, much less being the point that is lost to a 7-out. The probabilities of the 3rd and subsequent points being the one that eventually loses is progressively less.

Thus, the single most likely case is that the very first roll sets a point (N = 1) and that the very next roll (X=1) is the 7-out. Thus, 2 rolls is the most likely outcome, though it is several rolls less than the average hand.
miplet
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October 5th, 2014 at 7:11:15 PM permalink
Three. :+)
“Man Babes” #AxelFabulous
DanMahoney
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October 5th, 2014 at 7:27:01 PM permalink
I usually roll about 14 to 19 yo's on the comeout then establish a point followed by a seven. So I say more than 10
ontariodealer
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October 5th, 2014 at 7:36:13 PM permalink
I refused to answer because, stick change, waitress at the table and somebody spoke to the shooter are not on the choices.
get second you pig
mustangsally
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October 5th, 2014 at 11:27:57 PM permalink
Quote: eagledice

I voted 3. Just spent week in Las Vegas. Combination work and pleasure. I would say based on my many times at the craps tables, 3 was the magic number.

cool
sometimes it is hard to remember the last 3 rolls at any craps table (unless they were written down or one is playing "shoot to win craps")

reading the other posts in this thread it seems to me many misunderstood my question
this happens in casinos too

=================================
those that follow and the answers too soon,
what roll is the 7out roll
given the shooter has just selected their 2 dice and have not yet thrown their first come out roll

I said nothing about a point already being set
=================================

the reason for this thread is to show how easy it is to calculate the length of a shooters hand using simple math
and to point out my disagreements with
this website
http://www.timetravelsports.com/craps.html
(do not get me wrong, it is a nice read, but contains many errors, imo)

#1) " If the first roll is any point, and the second roll is a seven, then they have sevened-out and are finished.
However, rolling only twice is rare. Shooters regularly make dozens of rolls."

#2) "Simulations are needed to make an estimate."
ugh

Sally
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odiousgambit
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October 6th, 2014 at 3:33:07 AM permalink
Quote: ontariodealer

I refused to answer because, stick change, waitress at the table and somebody spoke to the shooter are not on the choices.



+1
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
Dragline
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October 7th, 2014 at 8:59:10 PM permalink
Kind of a trick question, because if he sevens on roll #2, he never has an opportunity to seven out on the third or later roll.

So if the chance is 1/6 on the second roll, its only 5/6 x 1/6 on the third, because you don't even get there 1/6 of the time. The very possibility of it happening on roll two reduces this conditional probability for subsequent rolls.
mustangsally
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October 8th, 2014 at 9:22:13 AM permalink
Quote: Dragline

Kind of a trick question, because if he sevens on roll #2, he never has an opportunity to seven out on the third or later roll.

thank you for joining the discussion here

now,
not at all
kind of a trick question

really a simple easy question
================================================
a craps shooter picks his 2 dice and faces his first come out roll
what roll (from 2 to 2,000,000,000,000) is the most likely roll to 7 out on?
================================================

craps players say the skill of the shooter determines the answer, but that is not true, imo, as each roll is an independent event
some also say to 7out on roll 2 is a rare event
===================================

I have shown the probabilities to 7out on the 2nd and the 3rd roll so far in other posts
summary

the 2nd roll is easy as the only sequences that qualify are these
4,7
5,7
6,7
8,7
9,7
10,7

because there are 36*36 = 1296 ways the dice can land in exactly 2 rolls
we can easily calculate the number of ways for each sequence
4,7 = 3*6 = 18
5,7 = 4*6 = 24
6,7 = 5*6 = 30
(18+24+30)*2 = 144 ways
so 144/1296

but all this math was not really needed as the case for 2 rolls is simply 2/3 * 1/6 = 2/18 = 1/9 = 11.11%

Quote: Dragline

So if the chance is 1/6 on the second roll,

yes
Quote: Dragline

its only 5/6 x 1/6 on the third, because you don't even get there 1/6 of the time.

you over-counting
the first roll could be a 7 followed by 4,7 for example
Quote: Dragline

The very possibility of it happening on roll two reduces this conditional probability for subsequent rolls.

well, roll 3 has a higher probability than roll 2 as I showed in another post
so your conclusion is not correct

every possible sequence is right here to 7out on that 3rd roll
2,4,7
2,5,7
2,6,7
2,8,7
2,9,7
2,10,7
3,4,7
3,5,7
3,6,7
3,8,7
3,9,7
3,10,7
4,2,7
4,3,7
4,5,7
4,6,7
4,8,7
4,9,7
4,10,7
4,11,7
4,12,7
5,2,7
5,3,7
5,4,7
5,6,7
5,8,7
5,9,7
5,10,7
5,11,7
5,12,7
6,2,7
6,3,7
6,4,7
6,5,7
6,8,7
6,9,7
6,10,7
6,11,7
6,12,7
7,4,7
7,5,7
7,6,7
7,8,7
7,9,7
7,10,7
8,2,7
8,3,7
8,4,7
8,5,7
8,6,7
8,9,7
8,10,7
8,11,7
8,12,7
9,2,7
9,3,7
9,4,7
9,5,7
9,6,7
9,8,7
9,10,7
9,11,7
9,12,7
10,2,7
10,3,7
10,4,7
10,5,7
10,6,7
10,8,7
10,9,7
10,11,7
10,12,7
11,4,7
11,5,7
11,6,7
11,8,7
11,9,7
11,10,7
12,4,7
12,5,7
12,6,7
12,8,7
12,9,7
12,10,7

if one does the math the same way as I did for the 2nd roll
and divide the total by 36*36*36
that should be
5448 / 46656 = 11.67695473251%

higher than roll 2 at 11.11%

both of my results match these here
https://wizardofodds.com/games/craps/number-of-rolls/
"The second column is the probability of a seven-out on exactly that roll"

and the 2nd article here
https://wizardofvegas.com/member/7craps/blog/


now on to roll 4 but with a different method
using the chance of the 4th roll NOT being a 7out
(and will show roll 2 and 3 too this way)
My Excel
len-shooters-hand-recursive.xlsb
link in my blog


RollState 1 (cor)State 2 (4or10)State 3 (5or9)State 4 (6or8)survive past roll x
010001
1 12/36 6/36 8/36 10/361
20.1882716050.1805555560.2345679010.2854938270.888888889


Roll 0 = the shooter has selected the 2 dice for the come out roll but has not yet thrown them.
The 1 = that probability, the 3 point states are = 0

after roll#1
we now see the 4 probabilities for the 4 states the hand can be in
we must be in one of the 4 states with the stated probabilities.
(we are not considering a no-roll)

There are also transition probabilities to get to each state from roll to roll
It should be clear there are only two ways to get to a point state.
Either we came from a COR state at rollN-1 (the point was just established)
or we have remained in the point state (the roll was not a 7out or a point winner)

for row = roll 1
C3 = (6/36)*B2 + (27/36)*C2
(6/36)*B2 = the chance of rolling a 4 or 10 * the probability of being on the cor on the last roll
(27/36)*C2 = the chance of rolling any number except a 4,10,7 * the probability of being in that point state on the very last roll
D3 = (8/36)*B2 + (26/36)*D2
E3 = (10/36)*B2 + (25/36)*E2

for B3 we now have 4 ways to get to the cor
= (12/36)*B2 + (3/36)*C2 + (4/36)*D2 + (5/36)*E2
= we stay +we came from + we came from + we came from

F2 = the sum of B2 to E2

these cells get filled down to how far you want to go
I went to row 202

ok
this is done for me for now
I get bored quickly doing simple math
this was fun to a point
Roll7out on
00
10
20.111111111
30.116769547
40.104766804
50.091223629
60.078918038
70.068166764
80.058852758
90.05080065
100.043844137
110.037836136


===================================
imo,
it has been reported in the media that this problem is very difficult to calculate.
http://blogs.wsj.com/numbers/crunching-the-numbers-on-a-craps-record-703/

Some (including the Wizard of Odds who was in the news) used a simulation and some a Markov chain

Sally just used simple multiply and addition with the help of a spreadsheet

the world still has a long way to go to get to easy street for everyone


Sally
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MrLeft
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October 26th, 2014 at 5:54:22 AM permalink
Quote: ontariodealer

I refused to answer because, stick change, waitress at the table and somebody spoke to the shooter are not on the choices.



^ LMAO ^

Yeah .. the real answer is NEVER .. there is no roll you're ever more likely to roll a 7 .. each and every roll you only have a 1 in 6 chance of rolling 7 .. and a 5 in 6 chance of not rolling a 7! ;)


As for the answer of "how many rolls" until you roll a seven. The "average" would 6 .. since you always have a 1 in 6 chance. But obviously some of those rolls are forgotten because not too may people count 2,3,11,12 when there is a point and you're not playing Come bets or props. Then you also need to factor in "7 winners" on come out rolls after the previous roll was won (this is where you ask the Wizard to do his thing .. lol). And bla bla bla ... at the end of the day each roll you roll has a 1 in 6 chance of getting 7! Unless as Ontario Dealer forgot to mention .. it's a full moon on a Friday between 10 and 11 (am or pm doesn't really matter at this point)! ;)
sodawater
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October 26th, 2014 at 12:11:08 PM permalink
Edit -- misread the question
TerribleTom
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November 13th, 2014 at 10:23:34 PM permalink
The next one, of course!
FleaStiff
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November 14th, 2014 at 1:08:30 AM permalink
Quote: mustangsally

that should be 5448 / 46656 = 11.67695473251%
higher than roll 2 at 11.11%
Sally

Okay, that is 0.56 %.
So if I am out on the Strip panhandling so I can come in and get another twenty dollar buy-in, that 0.56 percent means twelve minutes less panhandling time.
AlanMendelson
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November 14th, 2014 at 2:10:33 AM permalink
I voted for 5 rolls since that's about what happens to me.

But I think the chances of a 7-out increases with the more rolls each shooter has since a 7-out is inevitable. If you escaped a 7 out for the first 100 rolls the likelihood of a 7 out increases on the 101st roll, and so forth.

The practical advice is to use this data to know when to stop pressing and to start regressing.

Given everything else discussed here, as soon as the shooter starts smiling the 7 is coming.
dicesitter
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November 17th, 2014 at 9:32:50 PM permalink
Alan



I will take the hundred and then see what happens. smiling...

I tend to have a number of short rolls which don't bother me much, as long
as I understand what I am looking for, then when I see what I am looking for
I bet more and most nights I have enough rolls over 20 to make a reasonable return
on my time.

But over-all i would agree, 4-5 is most likely, if i make it past 5-6 i have a good chance to hit
20 or more rolls.

Dicesetter
spr1000
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November 27th, 2014 at 7:25:10 PM permalink
I voted 6. From my experience,If there's a full table 2 out of 10 People will 7 out on the 2nd roll.
beachbumbabs
beachbumbabs
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November 29th, 2014 at 3:52:30 AM permalink
I am both of those people. When I was in Biloxi last month, I decided to prove it. I played with a full table but passed on the dice each time. Did ok. Went and did other things. Several hours later, passed the same table, full crew, no players. So I talked to them some about playing the don'ts, because they were available and I'm trying to understand a few things about the game. They were politely incredulous about my (admittedly sparse) throwing claims as a PSO loser. So I threw 12 PSO's in a row. No kidding. Interspersed were 2 come-out 7's and 3 craps, but every time I set a point my next throw was a 7. Even threw one from behind my back trying to change it up.

Ask Al, the PB from Harrah's, if you don't believe me. But I made sure I was the only one at the table so I wouldn't cost anybody else any money. I tipped them well for the tutorial, but at the end, they said, "um, yeah, you're a darksider". I should be proud, I guess.

BTW, somebody was looking for crapless craps. Harrah's Gulf Coast has it, and it's usually open.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
odiousgambit
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November 29th, 2014 at 3:56:34 AM permalink
Quote: beachbumbabs

I threw 12 PSO's in a row.



If somebody figures out that this is in the realm of 18 yo's in a row, just be quiet about it [g]
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
beachbumbabs
beachbumbabs
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:02:39 AM permalink
Quote: odiousgambit

If somebody figures out that this is in the realm of 18 yo's in a row, just be quiet about it [g]



Shhhh...lol.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
odiousgambit
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:30:40 AM permalink
not taking my own advice, if the question is posed as "at the point of having set the point [which is what I think you mean] what are the odds of rolling a 7 next, 12 times in a row?

1/6 each time, so this is easy [assuming that it is that easy]

I get about 1 in 2,176,782,137
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
beachbumbabs
beachbumbabs
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:33:06 AM permalink
Quote: odiousgambit

not taking my own advice, if the question is posed as "at the point of having set the point [which is what I think you mean] what are the odds of rolling a 7 next 12 times in a row?

1/6 each time, so this is easy [assuming that it is that easy]

I get about 1 in 2,176,782,137



They got progressively quieter (4 in the crew plus the PB) each time I did it. The stick was just standing there with his mouth open by the last couple.

My rolls were like this (don't recall what each point was by number, but the last 2 were 10-7)

3 8 7
7 4 7
10 7
6 7
7 12 5 7
8 7
8 7
9 7
2 6 7
9 7
10 7
10 7.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
AxelWolf
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:43:04 AM permalink
So what's the record on the forum?
♪♪Now you swear and kick and beg us That you're not a gamblin' man Then you find you're back in Vegas With a handle in your hand♪♪ Your black cards can make you money So you hide them when you're able In the land of casinos and money You must put them on the table♪♪ You go back Jack do it again roulette wheels turinin' 'round and 'round♪♪ You go back Jack do it again♪♪
odiousgambit
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:58:24 AM permalink
bbb, you don't say whether you were rightside or darkside
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
beachbumbabs
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November 29th, 2014 at 6:26:24 AM permalink
I bet rightside for the first 8, then went to the darkside. Does it matter as to the dice throws? I lost $130 overall, but that included $30 for tips/tuition. It was a long conversation and I got a lot of good information from them, wanted to pay for their time.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
odiousgambit
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November 29th, 2014 at 11:21:10 AM permalink
it's just that it's usual in stories of bad luck like this, a series of persistent unlikely events, for it to go against the player, and I thought this might be an exception.

as far as throwing the dice, the rules are the same, you give them up after 7-out even as a darkside shooter
the next time Dame Fortune toys with your heart, your soul and your wallet, raise your glass and praise her thus: “Thanks for nothing, you cold-hearted, evil, damnable, nefarious, low-life, malicious monster from Hell!”   She is, after all, stone deaf. ... Arnold Snyder
Doc
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November 29th, 2014 at 2:29:50 PM permalink
Quote: odiousgambit

as far as throwing the dice, the rules are the same, you give them up after 7-out even as a darkside shooter


If you are the only player at the table, the dice come right back to you for a different hand. I think that was BBB's situation here, whether she was playing right side or dark side on individual hands.
beachbumbabs
beachbumbabs
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November 29th, 2014 at 5:45:50 PM permalink
Quote: Doc

If you are the only player at the table, the dice come right back to you for a different hand. I think that was BBB's situation here, whether she was playing right side or dark side on individual hands.



Right. I waited to approach them until 3am, when the table was open but the players had left. They were stuck til 4am regardless, so I wasn't keeping them; they were fun to talk to. I overtipped on purpose, with 5 people working 1 minbet gambler and providing lots of advice, but my impression was they were enjoying giving advice to a newbie anyway. Not that they weren't paid to be there regardless, but I like playing with people who want to be there, not drabs waiting for the shift to end and resenting someone coming in and preventing them from closing.
If the House lost every hand, they wouldn't deal the game.
spr1000
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November 30th, 2014 at 3:24:13 PM permalink
Sounds more like crappy dice. 10 games with 7 out after the point established seems to not add up mathematically. Especially when your were playing by yourself,the game moves faster which is to your advantage.You should have at least hit your point 2-3 times within 10 games,but good for You for winning on the the Don't.
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