Play smart...learn how to play casino craps the right way!
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Chapter 7 Dice Setting (continued)
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...Another website suggests warming up with your practice box or in your hotel room's dresser drawer before going down to the tables
to get a feel for how your toss is at that particular time of day. A dresser drawer? Good grief. Even the dumbest moron should quickly
realize how silly that sounds. A dresser drawer doesn't have the same rebound characteristics and friction coefficient as a craps table,
and doesn't have little rubber spikes on the back wall against which the dice must bounce. So, how could practicing in a three-foot-wide
dresser drawer without rubber spikes foretell anything about your potential results at a twelve-foot craps table?
It may be possible to minimally control the flight of the dice before they hit the table, but I just don't believe anyone can control their
multiple bounces, especially off the back wall that's lined with hundreds of little rubber spikes, each of which is carefully designed to
produce a random bounce. See Figures 7-1 and 7-2 for illustrations of the pyramid rubber that lines the back wall. Remember, we
learned in an earlier chapter that the casino has strict rules for tossing the dice, which include a requirement that they hit the back wall
(thereby, hitting the pyramid rubber). Do you honestly believe that anyone can consistently control the precise angles and speed at which
the dice contact those rubber spikes? Additionally, to compound the problem, the layout is often sprinkled with chips in the Pass Line,
apron, Don't Pass line, Come box, point boxes, and Field box. The dice sometimes hit one or more chips before or after bouncing off
the wall. It's unlikely that anyone can control the angle at which the dice contact the chip and, therefore, the deflection off that chip.

Figure 7-1. Pyramid Rubber on the Back Wall of the Table
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Please click on the link for the next page to continue reading Chapter 7.
Figure 7-2. Close-up of the Pointy Rubber Pyramids on the Back Wall (Straight-on Frontal View)
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Don't get duped into believing that dice setting actually works! Play smart...learn the secret to craps.
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Remember, learn how to play casino craps the right way! My book teaches you to play in reality, not Fantasyland.
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The books and websites claim that casinos hate "skilled" dice shooters because of their potential for changing a small house advantage into
a small player advantage. Yes, casinos hate dice setters, but not for that reason. Casinos hate them because they delay the game, which
means fewer rolls per hour, which means fewer dollars for the casino (the lower the roll rate (rolls per hour), the lower the casino's
profit). Dice setters seemingly take forever to shoot. They slowly rotate each die until the perfect combination appears, then carefully
align them, then slowly take what they believe is a precise grip with the precise amount of pressure, then apply the perfect amount of
mojo to the dice by waving their free hand over them or blowing on them or doing some other nonsense, and then finally toss them using
some sort of weird gyration designed to impress everyone at the table with their dice-tossing skill. Instead of taking two or three seconds
to simply pick up the dice and toss them, these clowns take what feels like forever. The casinos don't like them, I don't like them, and
neither will you.
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