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Baccarat Betting Guide

A baccarat betting guide is a helpful tool in helping new players understand how to bet in baccarat.

As a rule, baccarat is one of the hardest games to make a betting guide for, as it is absolutely a game of pure chance. A baccarat betting guide would ideally be able to provide the reader with a fool proof means of playing hands that would ensure wins. The very nature of baccarat however, prevents such a possibility. It is one of the fairest games to be found on the casino floor, with a house advantage of only 1%; therefore a baccarat betting guide, whilst not providing absolute rules, can at lease provide good advice for making the most of those odds.


Baccarat Betting Guide – Roll with it

Online casinos will provide you with a history on the side of the screen; land based casinos will provide charts on which you may jot down the outcomes. Mathematically speaking, there is no way that previous outcomes can determine what the next hand might be. That being said, experienced players will maintain that there are such things as streaks; both winning and loosing, and these shouldn't be ignored.

Therefore virtually every baccarat betting guide will advise you to ride a winning streak, but to cash out whilst your on top. There's nothing worse than having a million and walking out with nothing. Therefore, when betting on a streak, you should suffer one loss and one loss only before changing your bet – remember that not winning is loosing, and if you're streak is over, then you're loosing. The worst possible situation at this point is to find yourself on a loosing streak, or rather betting against a winning streak. Remember, that the outcome can change with each hand, so don't be afraid to change your bet accordingly.


Baccarat betting guide – the 1,3,2,6 system

As we established, with baccarat you can't affect the cards, but you can effect how you bet on them. The 1.3.2.5 system is a betting system that many baccarat players swear by, as it keeps bets low and protects the original stack, whilst allowing for the possibility of high returns. In an ideal run; this is how the 1.3.2.6 system works:

  1. one unit is bet on the first hand
  2. A win will give you two units. You add one unit from your stack creating a second hand wager of 3 units.
  3. A second hand win gives you six units of which four should be removed, leaving you with a third hand wager of two units.
  4. A third hand win gives you four units on the table to which a further two should be added from your stack, thus creating a fourth hand bet of six units.
  5. If you win this hand you have 12 units of which you have only contributed 2 from your own original stack.

As soon as you loose a round, you go back to a 1 unit bet.


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