I have an idea for a strategy in craps (not a system!) that seems simple and I am wondering what it does to the expected loss (I'm pretty sure nothing?) and just how deep of pockets you would need to withstand play for say, two standard deviations of probabilistic swings. Does anyone have any pointers for how to test this? I tried googling around and didn't find anything really...
The strategy is very simple but a bit hard to explain, on a 2x odds table basically start out with a 1 unit pass line bet, then play max odds, and put down a come bet that will cover your initial bet if the shooter sevens out (1.5 units), if the shooter now throws a point, place max odds, and another come but to cover all your previous wagers (7.5 units). Rinse, and repeat.
The big problem with this strategy is that if you are quickly wagering huge amounts of money and unless you had a gigantic bankroll would eventually end up unable to cover yourself, the shooter would seven out and you would go home penniless. Anyway, any thoughts or pointers to how I can get some statistics on this would be appreciated.
Test it in the short run with the Wizard's game here, and in the long run by using Wincraps if you can spring for it. That's found at www.cloudcitysoftware.com/ . Best $20 I've spent in a while.
Quote: renniSaint
I have an idea for a strategy in craps (not a system!) that seems simple and I am wondering what it does to the expected loss (I'm pretty sure nothing?)
How do you add negative-expectation bets and get to zero? It doesn't work. So I'm 'pretty sure' you're wrong.
Quote: renniSaint
The strategy is very simple but a bit hard to explain, on a 2x odds table basically start out with a 1 unit pass line bet, then play max odds, and put down a come bet that will cover your initial bet if the shooter sevens out (1.5 units), if the shooter now throws a point, place max odds, and another come but to cover all your previous wagers (7.5 units). Rinse, and repeat.
You have a modified martingale. What happens if a crap (2/3/12) comes out after the original point is established? You just pile that on to your next Come bet on the next roll?
Quote: rennisaint
The big problem with this strategy is that if you are quickly wagering huge amounts of money and unless you had a gigantic bankroll would eventually end up unable to cover yourself, the shooter would seven out and you would go home penniless. Anyway, any thoughts or pointers to how I can get some statistics on this would be appreciated.
It isn't even bankroll - it's the ration between the table min/max. If one unit is $10 and the table max is $5,000, you don't need a lot of multiplications (and with the odds bet in play, you're going to see even bigger swings.) As soon as you reach/exceed that limit, you're hosed... Sorta.
In the end, a martingale shifts the swings of variance to include a lot of little, small wins and one or two giant freaking losses. The weighted average of these.. land you right back at the house edge for the plain-old pass-line+odds bet.
Isn't it ironic, don'tcha think?
Quote: PerpetualNewbieHow do you add negative-expectation bets and get to zero? It doesn't work. So I'm 'pretty sure' you're wrong.
I think you misunderstand my meaning; what I meant was that I'm pretty sure this strategy ends up not effecting the house edge and will end up with the exact same expected loss as a regular pass plus odds bet (i.e. it does nothing to the expected loss).
Quote: PerpetualNewbieYou have a modified martingale. What happens if a crap (2/3/12) comes out after the original point is established? You just pile that on to your next Come bet on the next roll?
Exactly.
Quote: PerpetualNewbieIt isn't even bankroll - it's the ration between the table min/max. If one unit is $10 and the table max is $5,000, you don't need a lot of multiplications (and with the odds bet in play, you're going to see even bigger swings.) As soon as you reach/exceed that limit, you're hosed... Sorta.
That is the big question, where do typical ratios land. 2 standard deviations of play, or 3?
Quote: PerpetualNewbieHow do you add negative-expectation bets and get to zero? It doesn't work. So I'm 'pretty sure' you're wrong.
Quote: rennaisaintI have an idea for a strategy in craps (not a system!) that seems simple and I am wondering what it does to the expected loss (I'm pretty sure nothing?)
I'm pretty sure that the "nothing" in Renni's quote meant no change, and not no HE. So I think you two basically agree, then.
Quote: PerpetualNewbie
Isn't it ironic, don'tcha think?
A little too ironic, and yeah I really do think...
Thanks for the catch.
Your strategy sounds like it would be easy to program into the autorun feature, and WinCraps can then play it for as many rolls as you can stomach. I use it to test betting schemes all the time.
I think this was covered without odds at this threadQuote: renniSaintThe strategy is very simple but a bit hard to explain, on a 2x odds table basically start out with a 1 unit pass line bet, then play max odds, and put down a come bet that will cover your initial bet if the shooter sevens out (1.5 units), if the shooter now throws a point, place max odds, and another come but to cover all your previous wagers (7.5 units). Rinse, and repeat.
The big problem with this strategy is that if you are quickly wagering huge amounts of money and unless you had a gigantic bankroll would eventually end up unable to cover yourself, the shooter would seven out and you would go home penniless. Anyway, any thoughts or pointers to how I can get some statistics on this would be appreciated.
SIMPLE CRAPS STRATEGY
It was an Alan Krigman idea and there is already a WinCraps auto-bet file for it. I have not looked at it for a while and think that odds can be added.
I second WinCraps for $20. Easy to program and use IMO
I might have to try it out in WinCraps because I'm interested to see what it would look like (I'm guessing it would be a lot of little losses and some huge huge wins).
It would be a really fun way to play because you would be constantly vacillating between massive bets with tens of thousands of dollars on the table and tiny little one dollar pass line bets. Can you imagine seeing a guy playing a table with 200 yellow chips and then betting a white on the pass line. It would make for some fun entertainment.