INDEX The +Plus PerfectBlack Jack Strategy       
On the net Since 1994
Here is the entire text of the +Plus Perfect Strategy  [...well, almost:]

What the strategy it is for...

It lets you estimate the goodness of the deck and bet accordingly.
    It will tell you when it is time to bet more, and when to wait.
       It will tell you when to hit, stand, double down and split.
         You will not have to think what to do, if you use this strategy.
            Your only work will be in sticking to the demands of the strategy.
               It works with one or more decks.

 

 

Let's start... The Answer Tables.

aj_imag2.gif (1013 bytes)  The Answer Tables are the meat of the strategy...they tell you what to do for each situation you encounter during play. The answer tables do NOT tell you how much to bet! The COUNT tells you how much to bet. More about the count later.

The top row of each table shows the dealer’s up card. For example, the dealer may show a 2, or 3, or 4, and so on, up to an Ace. For any given deal, you will ‘be’ in one column of a table.

The left side of each table shows what cards you can hold. For each table, the meaning of the left-hand column is a bit different, but it is always about the cards you hold.

In the Hard Standing Numbers Answer Table for example, the left-hand side refers to your hand-total no matter how many cards you hold.

In the Soft Doubling table the left-hand column refers to your first two cards, if one of them is an Ace (soft hand).

There is an Answer Table for each thing you want to know during play. In Black Jack hands are said to be ‘soft hands’ if they contain an ace; all other hands are ‘hard’. That’s why for some situation there is a soft and a hard table. The Answer tables consist of

Hard Standing andSoft Standing
Hard Doublin andSoft Doubling
Pair Splitting
(These Answer Tables are included with your strategy)

How do I find my spot on the table?

Let’s say you have just been dealt two cards. They are 10,4 -- for a hand-total of 14. Suppose the dealer has a 5 showing. You ‘are’ at the intersection [square] of the row labeled 14 and of the column labeled 5. The number in that square is [-5]. That’s how you find your way in any of the tables. Later, we’ll talk more about what to do with the [-5] we found in the square in our table.

One more example from the Soft Doubling table will show how to find your square. Let’s say your first two cards are an Ace and an 8; the dealer shows a 3. The square at the intersection of the row labeled A,8 and of column 3 contains a [4].

Now you know how to find your way around in the tables. The idea and practice are simple. You just go to the tables that have the answers for the question you are asking yourself, such as "Should I hit or double down?"

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