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The Man Who Broke Atlantic City (Original Post) Swede Mar 2012 OP
because he was such a high roller, he got to negotiate house rules: Blue_Tires Mar 2012 #1
I suspect he won't be invited back Kingofalldems Mar 2012 #2

Blue_Tires

(55,445 posts)
1. because he was such a high roller, he got to negotiate house rules:
Thu Mar 15, 2012, 04:28 PM
Mar 2012

Johnson did not miss the math. For example, at the Trop, he was willing to play with a 20 percent discount after his losses hit $500,000, but only if the casino structured the rules of the game to shave away some of the house advantage. Johnson could calculate exactly how much of an advantage he would gain with each small adjustment in the rules of play. He won’t say what all the adjustments were in the final e-mailed agreement with the Trop, but they included playing with a hand-shuffled six-deck shoe; the right to split and double down on up to four hands at once; and a “soft 17” (the player can draw another card on a hand totaling six plus an ace, counting the ace as either a one or an 11, while the dealer must stand, counting the ace as an 11). When Johnson and the Trop finally agreed, he had whittled the house edge down to one-fourth of 1 percent, by his figuring. In effect, he was playing a 50-50 game against the house, and with the discount, he was risking only 80 cents of every dollar he played. He had to pony up $1 million of his own money to start, but, as he would say later: “You’d never lose the million. If you got to [$500,000 in losses], you would stop and take your 20 percent discount. You’d owe them only $400,000.”

Wow...I didn't even know casinos did this...I've been a sucker playing BJ with standard house rules...(luckily that mistake only cost me $20)

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