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Jacks or Better |
||||
|
Hand |
Payoff |
Number |
Probability |
Return |
|
Royal flush |
1000 |
553693344 |
0.000028 |
0.027777 |
|
Straight flush |
50 |
2181883836 |
0.000109 |
0.005473 |
|
4 of a kind |
20 |
46927098840 |
0.002354 |
0.047084 |
|
Full house |
7 |
228888423720 |
0.011483 |
0.080379 |
|
Flush |
5 |
220234644540 |
0.011049 |
0.055243 |
|
Straight |
4 |
226131938628 |
0.011344 |
0.045378 |
|
3 of a kind |
3 |
1477703531280 |
0.074133 |
0.222398 |
|
Two pair |
2 |
2569008096000 |
0.128881 |
0.257761 |
|
Jacks or better |
1 |
4252431465432 |
0.213334 |
0.213334 |
|
Nothing |
0 |
10909169741580 |
0.547286 |
0.000000 |
|
Total |
19933230517200 |
1.000000 |
0.954828 |
|
Most Boss Media casinos with multi-player software offer the same package of games. However an interesting exception is Player's Club. As of this writing Player's Club exclusively offered Big Six, European roulette, and Sic Bo.
Based on the Riverboat Casino the limit is $1-$1000 in baccarat, blackjack, and Caribbean poker. The pai gow poker limit is $5-$1000. The roulette limit is also $5-$1000 as a total of all bets on the table. The slot and video poker player may choose to play a 25 cent, 50 cent, $1, or $5 machine. The keno player may choose between $1, $2, and $5.
Standard rules are followed with six decks of cards. House edge on the banker bet is 1.06%, on the player bet is 1.24%, and on the tie bet is 14.44%.
As far as I know Player's Club is the only casino to offer Big Six, which they call "Money Wheel," anywhere on the Internet. The usual rules are followed. the best bet is on $1 with a house edge of 11.11%.
There are two versions of blackjack, regular and single deck. Except for the number of decks the rules are the same as follows:
In the single deck game the player edge is
0.11%.
In the six deck game the house edge is 0.46%.
Following is the basic strategy chart for the single deck game.

Here is the strategy for the six-deck game.
The standard pay table is used for a house edge of 5.22%. A $1 progressive side bet is also available. The side bet pays $50 for a flush, $100 for a full house, $500 for a four of a kind, 10% of the meter for a straight flush, and 100% of the meter for a royal flush. To have no house edge the meter would need to be $218047.37. On December 13, 2000 the meter at the Cowboy Casino was at $7849, for a house edge of 61.47%. On July 29,2001 the meter at the Riverboat Casino was $9811.20 for a house edge of 60.89%. Clearly not enough money is being pumped into the meter.
The Boss Media programmers did a fine job with craps, which is a difficult game to do well. They offer two times odds on all points. The combined house edge on the pass line and the odds is 0.606%. The don't odds are correctly relative to the amount the player can win, a rule few software companies get right. The combined house edge on the don't pass and laying odds is 0.455%.
On the buy bets winnings are calculated based on 95% of the bet made. This is equivalent to paying 57-50 odds on the 6 and 8, for a house edge of 2.73%; 57-40 on the 5 and 9, for a house edge of 3.00%; and 95-50 on the 4 and 10 for a house edge of 3.33%.
On the lay bets 5% is deducated from all winnings. This is equivalent to paying 19-24 odds on the 6 and 8, for a house edge of 2.27%; 19-30 on the 5 and 9, for a house edge of 2.00%; and 19-40 on the 4 and 10 for a house edge of 1.67%.
Boss Media also correctly turns off odds on come bets, buy bets, place bets, and hard ways on a come out roll. This is another rule other sofware companies frequently get wrong. There are no place to lose bets, which are not offered in the U.S. anyway. Why other software companies offer this bet I am not sure.
Winnings are kindly paid to the penny. Finally, the player can choose to throw the dice fast, slow, or crazy. The player may also decline to shoot.
In terms of game play this is easily the bets game of craps I have seen on the Internet. Unfortunatley they only offer double odds.
The multi-player keno payoffs are stingy, as can be seen in the following table.
|
Boss Media Keno |
|
|
Pick |
Return |
|
2 |
68.04% |
|
3 |
69.38% |
|
4 |
67.39% |
|
5 |
67.57% |
|
6 |
70.64% |
|
7 |
69.56% |
|
8 |
67.47% |
|
9 |
64.53% |
|
10 |
69.61% |
Mathematically speaking this is the same game as 'Five Deck Frenzy' or what Starnet calls 'King of the Deck.' In this game there are 5 spinning reels, each with 52 stops, one for each card. The player may hold any given card on the first spin and then respin the discards. On the second spin the player can not get the same card back on the same reel. In other words it is the same thing as video poker with one deck for each card position.
I do not know the return for this game.
The multi-player version of pai gow poker features player banking. The turn to be banker zigzags between the players and the dealer, the dealer banking every other hand. If a player declines to bank or there is nobody in a seat the banker will revert to the dealer. There are five player positions at the table. In a one on one game the player would bank 1/10 of the time for an average house edge of 2.57%.
Single zero wheel. The house edge is 2.70% on all bets.
Player's Club casino offers European single zero roulette with the half-back rule if the ball lands in zero. The house edge is 1.35% on even money bets in this game.
Player's Club casino exclusively offers Sic Bo. The payoffs are better than some and worse than others. See my Sic Bo online section for a comparison to other software brands. Of special note is the 6-1 payoff on a 2-number combination, resulting in a house edge of 2.78%, much better than the usual 5-1 payoff with a 16.67% house edge.
The following table shows the payoff and house edge for all bets.
|
Boss Media Sic Bo |
|||
|
Bet |
Pays |
Prob. Win |
House Edge |
|
Small, Big |
1-1 |
48.61% |
2.78% |
|
4, 17 |
60-1 |
1.39% |
15.28% |
|
5, 16 |
30-1 |
2.78% |
13.89% |
|
6, 15 |
17-1 |
4.63% |
16.67% |
|
7, 14 |
12-1 |
6.94% |
9.72% |
|
8, 13 |
8-1 |
9.72% |
12.50% |
|
9, 12 |
6-1 |
11.57% |
18.98% |
|
10, 11 |
6-1 |
12.50% |
12.50% |
|
Triple |
180-1 |
0.46% |
16.20% |
|
Any triple |
30-1 |
2.78% |
13.89% |
|
Double |
10-1 |
7.41% |
18.52% |
|
Two die combination |
6-1 |
13.89% |
2.78% |
|
Any number |
(1/2/3)-1 |
42.13% |
7.87% |
The lowest house edge bets are on big, small, and any two number combination, all at 2.78%.
There are two standard slot machines as follows:
The River Gold: Single line, 3 reels, 1-3 coin, with a maximum win of 5000 coins.
Gold Pirates: 3 reels, 1-4 coin, with a progressive jackpot and a bonus game. The bonus game is quite clever. There is a three-piece map, one piece for each reel. If the reel stops on a map piece the player keeps it until he either completes the map or a pirate takes it away. If a reel stops on a pirate he will take away any map piece already obtained for that reel. When the player obtains all three pieces of the map the game goes into the bonus round. The bonus round shows a treasure hunter digging in the sand. He will eventually find a prize of a multiple of the amount bet. The possible multiples are 5, 10, 50, and 100. If you do play this game I would recommend against leaving while you have any map pieces but wait until you have none.
Same jacks or better game as the single player version. Return of 95.48% with optimal strategy.
I hear that the Jamaica Bay casino exclusively offers "Omega Poker", which is Jacks or Better with a double up feature.
Other Boss Media info:
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