Baccarat Baccarat coolers

cyph

Trusted Member
I haven't heard of any old-fashioned coolers in decades. The last mention of this play involved a complete switch of both the cards and shoe. The cards were washed, shuffled, laced, and put back into the shoe. After the normal baccarat burn card procedure, one legitimate hand was played. Then, with multiple turns, the entire shoe was dropped into a lady's large handbag as the cooler was introduced. After the cooler was dealt, the bucket was heavy a few cards from the original shoe, but who would possibly notice the discrepancy? Almost all of the players and bosses were down with the scam. The baccarat cooler has no equal. When all players can bet the same side, bet the tie, and use up so few cards to complete a hand (80 coups per shoe)) the scores can be gigantic.

On the other hand, minibaccarat has been victim to a few coolers. These scams are identical; to those described in blackjack, with and without electronic assistance, as in Deadlock. Hidden computers for exploiting baccarat coolers and slugs have many interesting functions. They handle the; baccarat burn procedure with ease. They can signal a tie that is three or four hands awa^so 'a ft^ra! betting progression can snap off a tie without bringing heat from unexpected bets. They can even indicate when the winning side violates the'correct top card strategy; such as betting the bank when the top card is a nine. This function is specially designed for the knowledgeable gamer who may be looking for ,ia correlation between big bets and top cards, suggesting that marked cards or other types of top card information were used.

|!?| Interestingly, coolers have always been more prevalent in blackjack where the slug scam doesn't have the potency that it has in baccarat. Conversely, stag scams have always been more prevalent in baccarat, where they remain a powerful scam, and, therefore, there's less of a need or desire to cold deck the game.
 
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