Play smart...learn how to play casino craps the right way!
Want Proof Dice Control is a Scam?
by William J. Enslen, Jr.
Be smart, play smart, and learn how to play craps the right way!

Is it legitimate or a scam?  Let's take a look.  I suspect that the
notion of dice control is a big-money industry (perhaps,
multi-million dollars annually).  You name it and they sell it:
books, tapes, seminars, full-size practice craps tables, half-size
tables (a.k.a. throwing stations), toss bars, dice, and practice
grippers.  But is it real or just an elaborate hoax to swindle you
out of your hard-earned money?  The answer seems so
obvious.  Sadly, the world will never be without plenty of people
so blinded by their burning desire to win big that they can't or
won't stop long enough to think twice before handing over their
money.

If you've read my other articles and Ebook, you know my
thoughts on the world of dice control, dice setting, precision
shooting, or whatever else you want to call it.  In my opinion, it's
a silly world called Fantasyland.  I won't regurgitate my other
works so let's get to the point of this article.  You want proof that
dice control is a scam to rip you off?  Consider one simple
question and its answer.  Take a deep breath and try to relax
your overwhelming desire to get rich off the casino.  Now, ask
yourself, "Do you think that the casino would allow truly skilled
dice setters to play with an advantage over the house, no
matter how slight?"  Be honest with your answer.

Again, "Do you think that the casino would allow truly skilled
dice setters to play with an advantage over the house, no
matter how slight?"  Of course not.  The casino has the right to
deny service to any player for any reason, whether you're too
drunk, too obnoxious, too lucky, too skilled, or too anything.  If
they don't want you playing for any reason, they can tell you to
leave and there's nothing you, the law, or anyone can do about
it.  Consider blackjack card counters.  Card counting is entirely
legal, but if the casino thinks a player is card counting (and,
thus, has a small advantage over the house), it immediately
removes him from the game.  The casino never accepts a
player advantage.  The casino always has the
advantage--always.  Same with craps.  If the casino believes a
player has an advantage over the house by means of
controlling the dice, it removes him from the game.  The bottom
line is that when the dice hit the back wall, no one knows how
they'll bounce off those rubber pyramids.  That's why casinos
allow dice setters to use their wacky tossing routines.

Again, "Do you think that the casino would allow truly skilled
dice setters to play with an advantage over the house, no
matter how slight?"  I've never heard of any of the so-called dice
doctors, dice wizards, or famous multi-book dice-control authors
getting thrown out of a casino because of their dice-tossing
skills.  Have you?  According to their websites and written works,
they routinely play in casinos across the globe allegedly beating
the crap out of the casino.  So, ask yourself again, "Do you
think that the casino would allow truly skilled dice setters to play
with an advantage over the house, no matter how slight?"

Casinos have been around for a long time.  They're big
business.  Consider the multi-billion dollar resorts in Vegas
(yes, that's "billion" with a "b").  Do you honestly think they
haven't thoroughly examined the legitimacy of dice control?  A
player advantage smacks those mega-businesses right where it
hurts--in their wallets.  Do you honestly think the casinos would
tolerate and allow a player to play with an advantage over the
house?  The answer is obvious to me.  Is it obvious to you?  Put
yourself in the casinos' shoes.  If you have the right to deny
service to anyone for any reason, why would you allow anyone
to play with an advantage over you, especially at a craps table?
 I doubt that you would.

If you agree that casinos do allow dice-control specialists
to play, and if you agree that casinos don't allow players
to play with an advantage over the house, then what
does that tell you about all the books, articles, websites,
newsletters, and magazines that claim you can beat the
crap out of the casino by using dice control?  I don't see
how the answer could be any more obvious or simple.  
Casinos allow dice setters to play; casinos don't allow a
player to play with an advantage over the house;
therefore, it stands to reason that the casino doesn't
believe the dice setter can gain an advantage over the
house.  It's that simple.  You wanted proof that dice
control is a scam?  That sounds like awfully convincing
proof to me, how about you?  If it's true that the casino
doesn't believe the dice setter can gain an advantage
over the house, then why should you believe it?

If you still don't see the light, it's probably because you're
desperately clinging to your blazing desire to beat the crap out
of the casino.  You want so badly the idea of dice control to be
legitimate that you can taste it.  You think,
"Regardless of what
you say, I saw a guy last night set the dice and he rolled point
after point.  It worked for him, so how can you say it doesn't
work?"
 Simple.  It was his turn to get lucky at that particular
instant in time.  Everyone has good times, mediocre times, and
bad times.  Even the dice setter gets lucky occasionally.  The
question is whether the dice setter is consistently a winner.  
He's not.  His hot streak turns cold, just as it does for everyone.  
Minutes after his hot roll, the dice setter again goes through his
wacky motions, but this time he immediately rolls a losing 7-out.  
As we learned in my other articles, it's not the player's
dice-shooting skill or the player's betting system that makes him
a winner, it's the distribution variance.  The game is designed
for the player to lose, so the player's only hope for winning lies
with the phenomenon called variance.  Nothing more, nothing
less.  (Read my other article titled, Variance.)

One more time, "Do you think that the casino would allow truly
skilled dice setters to play with an advantage over the house,
no matter how slight?"  Rationally think about that question and
its answer, and then decide for yourself if the notion of dice
control is a scam.  If the casino doesn't believe dice setters can
gain an advantage over the house, then why should you believe
it?

Now you know!  Remember, be smart, play smart, and learn
how to play craps the right way.

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Remember, don’t be a sucker.  Don’t fall for bogus claims of consistently
beating the house.  Don’t get sucked into believing dice setting actually
works.  If you’re going to play craps, whether online or at a live table, you
must know fact from fantasy.  My book,
The Secret to Craps: The Right Way
to Play
, tells it like it is without offering false hope or preying on your desire to
win big.  Learn to play in reality.  Learn how to play craps the right way.
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