Dictionary Definition
blackjack
Noun
1 a common scrubby deciduous tree of central and
southeastern United States having dark bark and broad 3-lobed
(club-shaped) leaves; tends to form dense thickets [syn: blackjack
oak, jack oak,
Quercus
marilandica]
2 a piece of metal covered by leather with a
flexible handle; used for hitting people [syn: cosh, sap]
3 a gambling game using cards; the object is to
hold cards having a higher count than those dealt to the bank up to
but not exceeding 21 [syn: twenty-one,
vingt-et-un] v
: exert pressure on someone through threats [syn: blackmail, pressure]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Alternative spellings
Pronunciation
- blăk'jăk, /ˈblækdʒæk/, /"bl
Extensive Definition
Blackjack (also known as Twenty-one, Vingt-et-un
(French for Twenty-one), or Pontoon) is one of the most popular
casino
card
games in the world. Much of blackjack's popularity is due to
the mix of chance with elements of skill, and the publicity that
surrounds card
counting (calculating the probability of advantages based on
the ratio of high cards to low cards). The casino version of the
game should not be confused with the British card game Black
Jack (a variant of Crazy
Eights).
History of blackjack
Blackjack's precursor was vingt-et-un ("twenty-one"), which originated in French casinos around 1700, and did not offer the 3:2 bonus for a two-card 21.When 21 was first introduced in the United States
it was not very popular, so gambling houses tried offering
various bonus payouts to get the players to the tables. One such
bonus was a 10-to-1 payout if the player's hand consisted of the
ace of spades and a black Jack (either the Jack of clubs or the
Jack of spades). This hand was called a "blackjack" and the name
stuck to the game even though the bonus payout was soon abolished.
As the game is currently played, a "blackjack" may not necessarily
contain a jack or any black cards at all.
How to play blackjack
The hand with the highest total wins as long as it doesn't exceed 21; a hand with a higher total than 21 is said to bust or too many. Cards 2 through 10 are worth their face value, and face cards (jack, queen, king) are all worth 10. An ace's value is 11 unless this would cause the player to bust, in which case it is worth 1. A hand in which an ace's value is counted as 11 is called a soft hand, because it cannot be busted if the player draws another card.Each player's goal is to beat the dealer by
having the higher, unbusted hand. Note that if the player busts he
loses, even if the dealer also busts. If both the player and the
dealer have the same point value, it is called a "push", and
neither player nor dealer wins the hand. Each player has an
independent game with the dealer, so it is possible for the dealer
to lose to some players but still beat the other players in the
same round. The minimum bet is printed on a sign on the table and
varies from casino to casino and table to table. After initial
bets are placed, the dealer
deals the cards, either from one or two hand-held decks of
cards, known as a "pitch" game, or more commonly from a
shoe
containing four or more decks. The dealer gives two cards to each
player including himself. One of the dealer's two cards is face-up
so all the players can see it, and the other is face down. (The
face-down card is known as the "hole card". In European blackjack,
the hole card is not actually dealt until the players all play
their hands.) The cards are dealt face up from a shoe, or face down
if it is a pitch game.
In American blackjack, if the dealer's face-up
card is an ace or a ten-value, the dealer checks his hole card to
see if he has blackjack. This check occurs before any of the
players play, but after they have been offered insurance (if the
face-up card is an ace). If the dealer has blackjack, all players
lose their initial bets, except players who also have blackjack,
who push. (In some American casinos, the dealer does not actually
check the hole card until after the players have all played. At
that time, if the dealer turns out to have blackjack, all players
who did not have blackjack lose their bets, and players who
increased their bets by doubling or splitting lose only the
original bet, and have the additional bets returned to them; thus,
the end result is precisely as if the dealer had checked the hole
card before playing.)
A two-card hand of 21 (an ace plus a ten-value
card) is called a "blackjack" or a "natural", and is an automatic
winner (unless the dealer has blackjack as well, in which case the
hand is a push). A player with a natural is usually paid 3:2 on his
bet. Some casinos pay only 6:5 on blackjacks; although this reduced
payout has generally been restricted to single-deck games (Current
Blackjack News, Pi Yee Press). This reduced payout for a natural
increases the house advantage over a player by as much as 1000
percent. The move was decried by longtime blackjack players.
Player decisions
The player's options for playing his or her hand are:- Hit: Take another card.
- Stand: Take no more cards, also "stick" or "stay".
- Double down: Increase the wager to a maximum of double the original bet and take exactly one more card. For example, if the player's original bet was $25, the player could increase the bet by up to an additional $25, for a new total bet of up to $50. Increasing the wager to less than twice the original bet is called "double down for less".
- Split: Double the wager and have each card be the first card in a new hand. This option is available only when both cards have the same rank.
- Surrender: Forfeit half the bet and give up the hand.
Hand signals are required in most casinos, so
that in case of a dispute, a video record exists of the players
decisions.
The player's turn is over after deciding to
stand, doubling down to take a single card, or busting. If the
player busts, he or she loses the bet even if the dealer goes on to
bust.
After all the players have finished making their
decisions, the dealer then reveals his or her hidden hole card and
plays the hand. House rules say that the dealer must hit until he
or she has at least 17, regardless of what the players have. In
some casinos a dealer must also hit a soft 17 (a combination of
cards adding up to either 7 or 17, such as an ace and a 6).
If the dealer busts then all remaining players
win. Bets are normally paid out at the odds of 1:1. Players who
push (tie) with the dealer receive their original bet back.
Rules variations
Each blackjack variation has its own set of
rules, strategies and odds. It is advised to take a look at the
rules of the specific variation before playing. Many countries have
legal acts and laws, which determine how a casino game of Blackjack
must be played. Not all rules are posted. The player has to ask,
either before-hand or when the situation occurs. Over 100
variations exist.
Dealer soft 17
In fact, there are two slightly different dealer
strategies. In the "S17" game, dealer stands on all 17s. In the
"H17" game, dealer hits on soft 17s; of course, he stands on hard
17s. (In either case, the dealer has no choice; he must or must not
hit.) The H17 game is substantially less favorable to the player.
Which game is customary depends on locality. Las Vegas Strip rules
are about equally split.
Number of decks
All things being equal, fewer decks are more
favorable for the player. (This is true for basic strategy players,
even without card counting.) In fact, all things are not equal;
multi-deck games almost always have otherwise better rules than
single-deck games.
Late surrender
The player may "give up" and get back half his
bet, before taking any other action. (In some places, this is
posted, "surrender is available", while in other places, it is
available, but it is not posted.) In some cases (15 vs. ten, 16 vs.
9, 16 vs. ace), this is slightly favorable. In one important case
(16 vs. ten), it is definitely favorable.
Resplit to nn
(In other words, the option to split exists for a
two-card hand from a split the same as the first two cards.) The
simplest rule is "resplit infinite"; this means that the player may
continue to split so long as he receives same-value cards and is
willing to put up the additional bet. More typically, the rule is
"resplit to four." These rules are practically identical, since
even four hands is fairly unusual.
Resplit aces
In general, after splitting aces, the player gets
only one card even with the above rule. With this rule in effect,
an exception is made: if the second card is an ace, the player can
resplit. (Of course, this is always favorable.)
Double after split
In other words, the option exists to double for a
two-card hand from a split the same as the first two cards.
Generally, the player should play a hand after a split the same as
the first two cards. However, this rule does slightly change which
hands should be split in the first place.
Double on 10 or 11 only
Often called "Reno" rules. (Also seen is "double
on 9, 10, or 11 only".) It is annoying to many players because
doubling soft hands is considered part of the game.
European no-hole-card rule
The dealer does not receive a hole card. If the
dealer is later found to have blackjack, the player loses his
original bet and any additional bets (doubles or splits).
In some places, the dealer does not receive a
hole card, but if the dealer is later found to have blackjack, the
player loses only his original bet but not any additional bets
(doubles or splits). This has the same advantage as the usual game
and it should not be considered "European no-hole-card rule".
Altered payout for natural
In some places, a natural pays 6:5 or even 1:1.
This reduces or removes one of the main advantages for the player.
Many players feel that this is tampering with a basic rule of the
game.
Dealer wins ties
This is catastrophic to the player. It is
sometimes seen in "blackjack-like" games.
Five Card Charlie
With this rule, the player always wins when five
cards have been drawn without busting.
Insurance
If the dealer's upcard is an Ace, the player is offered the option of taking Insurance before the dealer checks his 'hole card'.The player who wishes to take Insurance can bet
an amount up to half his original bet. The Insurance bet is placed
separately on a special portion of the table, which usually carries
the words "Insurance Pays 2:1". The player who is taking Insurance
is betting that the dealer was dealt a natural, i.e. a two-card 21
(a blackjack), and this bet by the player pays off 2:1 if it wins.
It is called insurance because it, in effect, can protect the
original bet if the dealer has a blackjack. If you bet the full
half of the original bet, you win the same amount of the player's
Blackjack wager. In this case, if insurance is taken and the player
doesn't have blackjack but dealer does, no money is lost. Of course
the dealer can end up not having blackjack and the player can still
win or lose the blackjack bet, and the insurance bet is
forfeit.
Insurance is a bad bet for the non-counting
player who has no knowledge of the hole card because it has a house
edge of 2% to 15%, depending on number of decks used and visible
10-cards . Essentially, taking insurance amounts to betting that
the dealer's hole card is a ten or face card. Since in an infinite
deck, 4/13 of the cards are tens or face cards, an unbiased
insurance wager would actually pay 9:4, or 2.25:1; since the bet
only pays 2:1, the house has a strong advantage. However, if the
player has been counting cards, he may know that more than a third
of the deck is ten-value cards, in which case insurance becomes a
good bet.
If a player has a natural (an ace and a ten or
face-card) and the dealer is showing an ace, the dealer usually
asks the player "Even money?" instead of offering insurance. If the
player accepts the offer, he is immediately paid 1:1 for his
natural, regardless of whether the dealer has blackjack. Thus,
accepting "even money" has exactly the same payout as buying
insurance: if the dealer does not have blackjack, the player would
forfeit the insurance bet and win 3:2 on the natural, thus
receiving a net payout equal to the original bet; if the dealer
does have blackjack, the player would push on the natural and win
2:1 on the insurance wager, again receiving a net payout equal to
the original bet. Since taking "even money" is equivalent to buying
insurance, it is likewise a bad choice for the player, unless he
has been counting cards and knows the deck has an unusually high
proportion of ten-value cards.
In casinos where a hole card is dealt, a dealer
who is showing a card with a value of Ace or 10 may slide
the corner of his or her facedown card over a small mirror or
electronic sensor on the tabletop in order to check whether he has
a natural. This practice minimizes the risk of inadvertently
revealing the hole card, which may give the sharp-eyed player a
considerable advantage.
Blackjack strategy
Basic strategy
Because blackjack has an element of player choice, players can reduce casino advantage by playing optimally. The complete set of optimal plays is known as basic strategy. There are slight variations depending on the house rules and number of decks. The above is a basic strategy table for 3 or more decks, dealer stands on soft 17, double on any 2 cards, double after split allowed, dealer peeks for blackjack, and blackjack pays 3:2. Key:- S = Stand
- H = Hit
- Dh = Double (if not allowed then hit)
- Ds = Double (if not allowed then stand)
- SP = Split
- SU = Surrender (if not allowed, then hit)
- H = Hit
Most Las Vegas strip casinos hit on soft 17. This
rule change requires a slightly modified basic strategy table --
double on 11 vs A, double on A/7 vs 2, and double on A/8 vs 6. Most
casinos outside of Vegas still stand on soft 17.
Card counting
Basic strategy provides the player with the
optimal play for any blackjack situation based on millions of hands
played in the long run. However in the short run, as the cards are
dealt from the deck, the remaining deck is no longer complete. By
keeping track of the cards that have already been played, it is
possible to know when the cards remaining in the deck are
advantageous for the player.
Card counting creates two opportunities:
- The player can make larger bets when he or she has the advantage. For example, the player can increase the starting bet if there are many aces and tens left in the deck, in the hope of hitting a blackjack.
- The player can use information about the remaining cards to improve upon the basic strategy rules for specific hands played. For example, with many tens left in the deck, the player may double down in more situations since there is a better chance of making a strong hand.
Virtually all card counting systems do not
require the player to remember which cards have been played.
Rather, a point system is established for the cards, and the player
keeps track of a simple point count as the cards are played out
from the dealer.
Depending on the particular blackjack rules in a
given casino, basic strategy reduces the house advantage to near 0
with some single-deck games, and less than one percent in a
multi-deck game. Card counting, if done correctly, can give the
player an advantage,
typically ranging from 0 to 2% over the house. To counter card
counting, many casinos switched from a single deck to multiple
decks, with the cards dealt out of a container known as a
"shoe".
In most US jurisdictions, card counting is legal
and is not considered cheating. However, most casinos have the
right to ban players, with or without cause, and card counting is
frequently used as a justification to ban a player. Usually, the
casino host will simply inform the player that he is no longer
welcome to play at that casino. Players must be careful not to
signal the fact that they are counting. The use of electronic or
other counting devices is usually illegal.
- See also: Martingale (betting system)
Composition-dependent strategy
Basic strategy is based on a player's point total and the dealer's visible card. A player's ideal decision may depend on the composition of his hand, not just the information considered in the basic strategy. For example, a player should ordinarily stand when holding 12 against a dealer 4. However, in a single deck game, the player should hit if his 12 consists of a 10 and a 2; this is because the player wants to receive any card other than a 10 if hitting, and the 10 in the player's hand is one less card available to cause a bust for the player or the dealer.However, in situations where basic and
composition-dependent strategy lead to different actions, the
difference in expected value between the two decisions will be
small. Additionally, as the number of decks used in a blackjack
game rises, both the number of situations where composition
determines the correct strategy and the house edge improvement from
using a composition-dependent strategy will fall. Using a
composition-dependent strategy only reduces house edge by 0.0031%
in a six-deck game, less than one tenth the improvement in a
single-deck game (0.0387%).
Shuffle tracking
Techniques other than card counting can swing the advantage of casino blackjack towards the player. All such techniques are based on the value of the cards to the player and the casino, as originally conceived by Edward O. Thorp. One technique, mainly applicable in multi-deck games, involves tracking groups of cards (aka slugs, clumps, packs) during the play of the shoe, following them through the shuffle and then playing and betting accordingly when those cards come into play from the new shoe. This technique, which is admittedly much more difficult than straight card counting and requires excellent eyesight and powers of visual estimation, has the additional benefit of fooling the casino people who are monitoring the player's actions and the count, since the shuffle tracker could be, at times, betting and/or playing opposite to how a straightforward card counter would.Arnold Snyder's articles in Blackjack
Forum magazine brought shuffle tracking to the general public.
His book, The Shuffle Tracker's Cookbook, mathematically analyzed
the player edge available from shuffle tracking based on the actual
size of the tracked slug. Jerry L.
Patterson also developed and published a shuffle-tracking
method for tracking favorable clumps of cards and cutting them into
play and tracking unfavorable clumps of cards and cutting them out
of play. Other legal methods of gaining a player advantage at
blackjack include a wide variety of techniques for hole carding
or gaining information about the next card to be dealt.
Variants
Pontoon is an English variation of blackjack with significant rule and strategy differences. However, in Australia and Malaysia, Pontoon is an unlicensed version of the American game Spanish 21 played without a hole card; despite the name, it bears no relation to English Pontoon.Spanish 21
provides players with many liberal blackjack rules, such as
doubling down any number of cards (with the option to 'rescue', or
surrender only one wager to the house), payout bonuses for five or
more card 21s, 6-7-8 21s, 7-7-7 21s, late surrender, and player
blackjacks always winning and player 21s always winning, at the
cost of having no 10 cards in the deck (though there are jacks,
queens, and kings).
21st Century Blackjack (also known as "Vegas
Style" Blackjack) is commonly found in many California card rooms.
In this form of the game, a player bust does not always result in
an automatic loss; there are a handful of situations where the
player can still push if the dealer busts as well, provided that
the dealer busts with a higher total.
Certain rules changes are employed to create new
variant games. These changes, while attracting the novice player,
actually increase the house edge in these games. Double
Exposure Blackjack is a variant in which the dealer's cards are
both face-up. This game increases house edge by paying even money on
blackjacks and players losing ties. Double
Attack Blackjack has very liberal blackjack rules and the
option of increasing one's wager after seeing the dealer's up card.
This game is dealt from a Spanish shoe, and blackjacks only pay
even money.
The French and German variant "Vingt-et-un"
(Twenty-one) and "Siebzehn und Vier" (Seventeen and Four) don't
include splitting. An ace can only count as eleven, but two aces
count as a Blackjack. This variant is seldom found in casinos, but
is more common in private circles and barracks.
Chinese
Blackjack is played by many in Asia, having no splitting of
cards, but with other card combination regulations.
Another variant is Blackjack
Switch, a version of blackjack in which a player is dealt two
hands and is allowed to switch cards. For example, if the player is
dealt 10-6 and 5-10, then the player can switch two cards to make
hands of 10-10 and 6-5. Natural blackjacks are paid 1:1 instead of
the standard 3:2, and a dealer 22 is a push.
In Multiple
Action Blackjack the player places between 2 or 3 bets on a
single hand. The dealer then gets a hand for each bet the player
places on a hand. This essentially doubles the number of hands a
single dealer can play per hour. Splitting and Doubling are still
allowed.
Recently, thanks to the popularity of poker,
Elimination
Blackjack has begun to gain a following. Elimination Blackjack
is a tournament format of blackjack.
Many casinos offer optional side bets at standard
blackjack tables. For example, one common side-bet is "Royal
Match", in which the player is paid if his first two cards are in
the same suit, and receives a higher payout if they are a suited
queen and king (and a jackpot payout if both the player and the
dealer have a suited queen-king hand). Another increasingly common
variant is "21+3," in which the player's two cards and the dealer's
up card form a three-card poker hand; players are paid 9 to 1 on a
straight, flush or three of a kind. These side bets invariably
offer worse odds than well-played blackjack.
In April of 2007 a new version of Blackjack,
called Three Card Blackjack™ was approved for play in the State of
Washington. Three Card Blackjack ™ is played with one deck of 52
cards. In Three Card Blackjack the players place an ante bet. The
players and dealer are then dealt 3 cards each. The players make
the best blackjack (21) hand they can using 2 or all 3 cards. If
the player likes their hand they make a play bet that is equivalent
to their ante bet. The dealer must qualify with an 18 or better. If
the dealer qualifies and the player beats the dealer, the player is
paid 1-1 on both the Ante and Play bets. If the dealer does not
qualify, the player is paid 1-1 on their Ante bet and their Play
bet pushes. There is no hitting and no busting. At the same time
that the player makes the Ante bet, they have the option of making
an Ace Plus bet. If the player has 1 Ace in their hand of 3 cards,
they get paid 1-1. An Ace and any 10 or Face Card pays them 3-1. An
Ace and any two 10's or Face cards is paid 5-1. Two Aces pays 15-1
and Three Aces pays 100-1.
Blackjack Hall of Fame
In 2002, professional gamblers around the world
were invited to nominate great blackjack players for admission into
the Blackjack
Hall of Fame. Seven members were inducted in 2002, with new
inductees every year afterwards. The physical hall of fame is
located at the Barona
Casino in San
Diego, California. Members include Edward O.
Thorp, author of the 1960s book Beat the Dealer which proved
that the game could be beaten with a combination of basic strategy
and card
counting; Ken Uston, who
popularized the concept of team play; Arnold
Snyder, author and editor of the Blackjack
Forum trade journal; Stanford
Wong, author and popularizer of the "Wonging" technique of only
playing at a positive count, and several others.
Notes
Sources
- Beat the Dealer : A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One, Edward O. Thorp, 1966, ISBN 978-0-394-70310-7
- Blackbelt in Blackjack, Arnold Snyder, 1998 (1980), ISBN 978-0-910575-05-8
- Blackjack: A Winner’s Handbook, Jerry L. Patterson, 2001, (1978), ISBN 0-399-52638-8
- Ken Uston on Blackjack, Ken Uston, 1986, ISBN 978-0-8184-0411-5
- Knock-Out Blackjack, Olaf Vancura and Ken Fuchs, 1998, ISBN 978-0-929712-31-4
- Luck, Logic, and White Lies: The Mathematics of Games, Jörg Bewersdorff, 2004, ISBN 978-1-56881-210-6, 121-134
- Million Dollar Blackjack, Ken Uston, 1994 (1981), ISBN 978-0-89746-068-2
- Playing Blackjack as a Business, Lawrence Revere, 1998 (1971), ISBN 978-0-8184-0064-3
- Professional Blackjack, Stanford Wong, 1994 (1975), ISBN 978-0-935926-21-7
- The Theory of Blackjack, Peter Griffin, 1996 (1979), ISBN 978-0-929712-12-3
- The Theory of Gambling and Statistical Logic, Richard A. Epstein, 1977, ISBN 978-0-12-240761-1, 215-251
- The World's Greatest Blackjack Book, Lance Humble and Carl Cooper, 1980, ISBN 978-0385153829
External links
Blackjack calculators
blackjack in Bulgarian: Блекджек
blackjack in Czech: Blackjack
blackjack in Danish: Blackjack
blackjack in German: Black Jack
blackjack in Estonian: Blackjack
blackjack in Modern Greek (1453-): Μπλακ
τζακ
blackjack in Spanish: Blackjack
blackjack in French: Blackjack (jeu)
blackjack in Indonesian: Blackjack
blackjack in Italian: Blackjack
blackjack in Hebrew: בלק ג'ק
blackjack in Dutch: Blackjack
blackjack in Japanese: ブラックジャック
blackjack in Narom: Blackjack
blackjack in Polish: Blackjack
blackjack in Portuguese: Blackjack
blackjack in Russian: Блэкджек
blackjack in Slovak: Blackjack
blackjack in Finnish: Black Jack
blackjack in Swedish: Black Jack
(kortspel)
blackjack in Turkish: Yirmibir
blackjack in Chinese: 廿一點
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Boston,
Earl of Coventry, Pit,
Polish bank, Russian bank, all fours, baccarat, banker, bastinado, bat, battering ram, billy, billy club, bludgeon, bluff, brag, bridge, bulldoze, bully, canasta, cane, casino, club, coerce, commerce, commit, connections, contract, contract bridge,
cosh, cribbage, cudgel, dragoon, ecarte, euchre, faro, ferule, five hundred, flinch, fright, frog, gin, gin rummy, goat, hearts, hijack, intimidate, keno, knobkerrie, lansquenet, life preserver,
loo, lottery, lotto, mace, matrimony, monte, morning star, napoleon, nightstick, old maid,
ombre, paddle, patience, penny ante, picquet, poker, put-and-take, quadrille, quarterstaff, ram, reverse, rouge et noir, rum, rummy, sandbag, seven-up, shanghai, shillelagh, skat, snipsnapsnorum, solitaire, speculation, spontoon, staff, stave, steamroller, stick, straight poker, strong-arm,
stud poker, thirty-one, truncheon, twenty-one, use
violence, vingt-et-un, war club, whist