Wager Big and Earn Little in Craps

If you consider using this approach you want to have a very large amount of cash and remarkable fortitude to step away when you acquire a tiny win. For the purposes of this material, a sample buy in of $2,000 is used.

The Horn Bet numbers are not always deemed the "successful way to wager" and the horn bet itself has a casino edge of over twelve percent.

All you are playing is $5 on the pass line and a single number from the horn. It does not matter whether it’s a "craps" or "yo" as long as you wager it routinely. The Yo is more prominent with players using this system for apparent reasons.

Buy in for two thousand dollars when you join the table but put only $5.00 on the passline and $1 on either the two, three, eleven, or twelve. If it wins, fantastic, if it does not win press to two dollars. If it loses again, press to $4 and then to eight dollars, then to sixteen dollars and following that add a $1.00 every subsequent bet. Each instance you don’t win, bet the previous value plus an additional dollar.

Adopting this scheme, if for example after fifteen tosses, the number you selected (11) hasn’t been tosses, you probably should walk away. Although, this is what might happen.

On the 10th toss, you have a total of $126 in the game and the YO finally hits, you amass $315 with a gain of $189. Now is an excellent time to go away as it’s higher than what you entered the game with.

If the YO doesn’t hit until the 20th toss, you will have a complete wager of $391 and seeing as current action is at $31, you win $465 with your gain being $74.

As you can see, employing this system with just a $1.00 "press," your profit margin becomes tinier the longer you wager on without attaining a win. This is why you must step away once you have won or you must bet a "full press" again and then advance on with the one dollar increase with each hand.

Carefully go over the data before you try this so you are very familiar at when this approach becomes a losing proposition instead of a winning one.