Monday, January 14, 2008

"Dont Come Wager"

Casino is like a wheel of luck one day it can turn in your way and other day it turns against your way. It depends how lucky you are .Playing casino is very exciting for all those who believe that they can fulfill all their dreams.

As you have probably figured out by now, the don’t come wager is the opposite of the come bet. The relationship between the don’t come wager and the don’t pass bet is the same as the relationship between the come wager and the pass bet. As with the come bet, the don’t come bet can be made at any time except before a come-out roll, that is, a don’t come bet can be made any time a don’t pass bet is not normally made. When a don’t come bet is made, the very next roll acts as a come-out for that don’t come bet, independent of what is happening with the pass and don’t pass bets.

By placing a don’t come bet, any roll (except the come-out) can establish a point for that bet, and the same rules apply as for a don’t pass bet. You can make as many or as few don’t come bets as you wish. In this way, you can make bets against additional points while the pass line shooter is trying to repeat his original point. Thus, depending on how many don’t come bets you make, you can have two or more points working at the same time.

To make a don’t come bet, place your chip or chips in the small don’t come box—you should do this only when the white side of the puck is facing up. If the next roll is neither a 7 or 11 (which you would lose) nor a 2 or 3 (which you would win), then it is your point and the dealer will move your bet to a small box above the appropriate place-number box. Now the only numbers that have meaning on the succeeding rolls are a 7 (you win) or your don’t come point (you lose). As you can see, this is the same as making a don’t pass bet, except that the point is a different number.

LAYING ODDS

Just like the pass bettor, the don’t bettor can add an odds bet to his don’t pass or don’t come wager. The only difference is that the pass bettor takes odds, meaning that if he wins, he gets paid more than the amount of his bet, whereas the don’t bettor has to lay odds because he gets paid less than even money on the odds portion of the bet.

Like pass bettors, when don’t bettors win, they are paid at true odds for the odds portion of their bet. They are paid less than even money, however, because they have a better than even chance of winning the bet as the previous chart indicated.

Just as for pass bettors, the odds bet has to be made as an add-on to an existing don’t pass or don’t come wager. The only time a player can lay odds for a don’t pass bet is after a point has been established.

The bet is made by stacking additional chips alongside the don’t pass bet. The dealer will reposition the chips, but you don’t have to worry about that.

For a don’t come bet, you can lay odds only after a point is established for that don’t come bet. The odds bet can be made after the dealer relocates the don’t come bet behind the appropriate point number. Instead of putting the chips next to the don’t come bet, put them in the don’t come box and tell the dealer that you want to lay odds. The dealer will then place them alongside your don’t come bet and heel the stack, so he can tell which portion of the bet is for the odds. When a stack is heeled, the bottom chip lays flat and the rest of the stack is tilted so that it is half on and half off the bottom chip.

The payouts for the different point numbers are shown in the following chart, which is an expansion of the previous chart on don’t pass bets.