Casinos make millions daily
39sShocking revenue figures and the bulletproof casino business model grab attention immediately.
▶ Play ClipThis video explores the mathematics and business model behind casinos, focusing on how they maintain a consistent profit despite the odds being only slightly in their favor. It delves into the technique of card counting in blackjack, explaining how players can gain a statistical advantage, and the countermeasures casinos employ to prevent it.
The 51 licensed casinos on the Las Vegas Strip have 2,879 gaming tables generating $3.1 billion annually and 38,864 slot machines generating $3.4 billion.
Casinos have a bulletproof business model where the odds are always in their favor. MGM International has 2.5 million square feet of casino floor worldwide, generating immense profits.
The house edge differs: roulette ~5.25%, poker ~3.35%, blackjack ~0.5%. Despite tight margins, casinos rely on volume to ensure profit.
To earn $1 billion from blackjack with a 0.5% house edge, casinos need $200 billion in bets. Slight changes in odds can cost millions.
Casinos' biggest threat is not robbers or cheaters but advantage players who tilt odds in their favor without altering the game outcome, like card counters.
Card counting is a legal technique in blackjack that uses the game's principles to gain a statistical edge. It involves tracking high and low cards.
Players aim to get cards totaling as close to 21 without going over. The dealer must hit below 17. Higher cards benefit players; lower cards benefit the dealer.
Cards 2-6 are +1, 7-9 are 0, 10-Ace are -1. The running count indicates whether odds favor player (positive) or dealer (negative).
With perfect strategy and bet variation, a card counter can earn about $110 per hour, turning blackjack into a profitable endeavor.
Casinos shuffle earlier, use more decks, or employ continuous shuffle machines to reduce card counting effectiveness. They also restrict bet changes.
Casinos look for bet changes correlated with the shoe's depth, large buy-ins, and consistent wins. They may flat-bet suspected counters.
To have a 1% risk of ruin while earning $170/hour, a card counter needs a $100,000 bankroll due to natural variance.
Casinos accept card counting as a minor cost, making it just hard enough to push counters to competitors.
Card counting is a mathematically sound but challenging way to gain an edge in blackjack, but casinos have effective countermeasures that limit its profitability. The arms race between players and casinos continues, driven by mathematics and economics.
"The title accurately promises an explanation of how to beat the casino and how they stop you, which the video delivers."
What is the house edge in blackjack?
About 0.5%.
01:30
How much money does a casino need in bets to earn $1 billion from blackjack?
$200 billion.
02:06
What is the Hi-Lo card counting system?
Cards 2-6 are +1, 7-9 are 0, 10-Ace are -1. The running count indicates whether odds favor player (positive) or dealer (negative).
06:15
How much can a card counter earn per hour on average?
About $110 per hour.
07:55
What bankroll is needed to have a 1% risk of ruin while earning $170/hour?
$100,000.
12:10
What is one countermeasure casinos use against card counting?
Shuffling earlier, using more decks, or continuous shuffle machines.
09:20
Is card counting illegal?
No, it is not illegal and in some cases is legally protected.
03:49
House Edge Varies
Shows the slim margins casinos operate on, making volume critical.
01:30Card Counting is Legal
Clarifies a common misconception about the legality of card counting.
03:49Hi-Lo System Explained
Provides a clear, actionable explanation of a card counting method.
06:15Casino Countermeasures
Details practical steps casinos take to protect profits.
08:22[00:00] Learn more about the math and science behind this video’s topic for 20% off by being one of the first 200 to go to Brilliant.org/Wendover.
[00:12] Within the walls of the 51 licensed casinos of the Las Vegas Strip, there are 2,879 gaming tables collectively bringing in $3.1 billion in revenue annually, or over a million dollars
[00:25] In addition, there are some 38,864 slot machines bringing in another $3.4 billion. A single large Las Vegas casino, like the Bellagio, make more annually than some small
[00:39] This is because the Casino business model is pretty much bulletproof. Overall, the odds are always in the Casino’s favor—if this weren’t true, the casino would fail—so these floors just print money.
[00:54] MGM International, for example, one of the world’s largest multinational gaming companies, has about 2.5 million square feet of Casino floor worldwide meaning it makes, on average, With the money their casinos bring in, they could line every inch of every foot of their
[01:12] casino floor worldwide with a brand new iPad and still have money left over. This is all to say, casinos make a lot of money, but to do so, they need a lot more You see, the casino business model all revolves around risk.
[01:30] With every game they have, the odds are in their favor, but that’s not to say the house Their advantage varies from game to game—in roulette, it’s about 5.25%, in Poker, it’s about 3.35%, and in Blackjack, it’s about 0.5%.
[01:46] Of course, given how tight these margins are, there's a natural variability so casinos can come out behind on a given table on a given night, but overall, with enough tables and However, in order to do so, they need an immense amount of money running through their casinos.
[02:06] Blackjack, for example, is one of the games with the lowest house edge, so if a casino wants to earn $1 billion in a given year from the game, which would not be an unreasonable estimate for a large gaming company like MGM International, they would need $200 billion
[02:21] $200 billion is an enormous amount of money. That’s pretty much the entire GDP of New Zealand, passing through, in the case of MGM, a physical structure barely larger than the Empire State Building.
[02:36] When you have such a rapid throughput of money, very slight changes in the odds can make a If, for example, the house edge in Blackjack changed from 0.5% to 0.4%, they would lose
[02:50] $200 million, assuming $200 billion in annual play. This is why making sure these odds stay in their favor is so important to casinos. It can quite literally make or break them.
[03:04] Despite what pop culture might portray, a casino’s biggest problem is not robbers or hackers or even technically cheaters, because each of those is relatively easy to prevent. Rather, their biggest problem is people who are able to turn the odds in their favor without
[03:20] You see, in most common-law countries, such as the US, England, Ireland, or Australia, cheating is legally defined as altering the outcome of the game, acquiring knowledge not
[03:32] available to all players, or changing ones bet after learning of the outcome. Cheating in a casino is generally illegal, however, it’s possible for a player to consistently The best-known example of this is card counting—a type of advantage play used in the Blackjack
[03:49] family of games which is not illegal and, in some cases, is even legally protected. This advantage play technique essentially takes the basic principles of the game of Blackjack and uses them against the casino, and these principles are fairly simple.
[04:04] So start a game, each player bets an amount of money, then, six decks of cards are shuffled Each player is dealt two cards, face-up, while the dealer gets one face-up and one face-down.
[04:17] The goal for all participants is simple—it’s to get their cards to total as close to 21 The execution of that is much tougher. Starting from the left, each player will either decide to stick with the total they have,
[04:32] Of course, the player doesn’t know what the next card will be worth, it could be anything from 1 to 11, so it’s a gamble on whether it’ll make the total go over 21—in which The higher the original total, the riskier it is to take another card, but there is,
[04:49] in fact, a mathematically optimal choice for every scenario. Once every player is done taking cards, or not, the dealer reveals the face-down card and, automatically, if their total is below 17, they take additional cards until it isn’t.
[05:04] If it’s 17 or higher, the leave it as is. If the dealer goes above 21, all players’ bets are doubled, as long as they didn’t If the player’s total is higher than the dealer’s, then the player’s bet is doubled.
[05:21] However, if the player’s total is lower, they lose their bet. Of course, this explanation skipped over plenty of smaller rules and unlikely edge-cases, but it is these fundamental elements of game-play that tie into why card counting works.
[05:35] Now, without getting too much into the math, on average, in Blackjack, higher-value cards While the explanation for the higher-cards is more complex, lower cards benefit is based
[05:49] on the fact that they are required to take additional cards when their total is less than 17 and so a greater density of lower cards makes it less likely that they’ll total over 21—in which case each player’s bet is doubled.
[06:01] Therefore, if you know that a bunch of low cards are coming, you know that the odds are against you and so you should reduce your bet or not play. But, the question is, how do you know what’s coming in a randomly shuffled deck?
[06:15] Well, you perform process of elimination, or, even more simply, you count the cards There are hundreds of different forms of card-counting that work in hundreds of different ways, but all are more or less based on what’s known as the Hi-Lo system.
[06:31] Two through six are assigned one, seven through nine are assigned zero, and ten, the face This is based on the fact that, every time a high-value card is dealt, there are fewer
[06:45] of them in the deck, which means the odds get worse for the player considering that high-value cards are better for them, and vice versa. With every card a player sees, they add up its assigned value.
[07:00] So, if there are three players, and they are dealt these cards, the running count would be one plus zero plus negative one plus one plus zero plus one plus zero, which would That total of two indicates that the odds have shifted slightly in the player’s favor,
[07:17] while if it were negative two that would indicate the odds were in the dealer’s favor. As play goes on, and they get deeper into the deck, the running count will generally increase in one direction or the other, giving the player more confidence on where their
[07:30] odds stand and so if, for example, the running count equalled twenty, the player would know that the odds were greatly in their favor and therefore that they should bet big on the next round, as they have a greater than 50% chance of winning.
[07:43] This is how people can reliably make money in Blackjack. If a player changed their bet by a factor of fifteen depending on the odds, and the dealer waited until they’re through five of the six decks before shuffling, a player,
[07:55] following perfect Blackjack strategy, could earn an advantage of about 1.182% over the That means that if, assuming a table completes a round of play every minute and the average
[08:07] bet is around $200, a card counter could profit, on average, about $110 an hour—enough that some people can and do make a living by sitting at Blackjack tables, counting cards.
[08:22] However, considering how simple and reliable this advantage play method is, casinos go to great lengths to stop it, which is very, very difficult. That’s because the advantage is all in the mind—there’s no good way to fully prove
[08:37] Sometimes, people are just lucky, and it’s quite a bad look for casinos to kick people That’s why, instead of trying to prove it, most casinos implement rules to try and stop
[08:50] Remember that, generally, the running count will get further into the positive or negative the further into the game one goes, because the card counter will have seen more cards While a few rounds in the running count might be in the single-digits positive or negative,
[09:08] further on, it’ll get into the double-digits which gives a counter great confidence on It’s towards the end of the shoe, the collection of un-dealt cards, when card counters really
[09:20] make their money, so to make it less profitable, casinos can just have their dealers shuffle If they shuffle four decks deep into the six-deck shoe rather than five, that decreases the player’s advantage from 1.182% to just 0.568%.
[09:35] However, shuffling earlier and more often also cuts into the casino’s profits because, anytime the dealer is shuffling, the non-advantage players aren’t playing and losing money—which Another option for casinos is to increase the number of decks they shuffle together
[09:53] Back before card-counting first became a widespread issue for casinos, they would play Blackjack with just a single deck of cards, but if they did this today, it would only be a matter of minutes before a card counter would have high confidence about the odds.
[10:07] Therefore, they typically now play with six decks shuffled together, which increases the time it takes to get to high confidence and, since time is money for a card counter, this Some casinos take this a step further by using continuous shuffle machines.
[10:24] With no discard pile, there is no increase or decrease in beneficial cards in the shoe, so card counting is completely ineffective, however, these machines are not yet fully widespread due to distrust by frequent players.
[10:37] know what the odds are at a given moment, the other method involves stopping a player’s ability to respond to this knowledge by changing the size of their bets.
[10:49] Essentially, if a dealer or a pit-boss suspects someone might be card counting, they’ll This is where a player is told to pick one bet size and then they are not allowed to
[11:01] Therefore, card counters might know that the odds are changing, but they will not be able to respond to it with a larger or smaller bet, so the odds will stay in the house’s
[11:13] However, that poses the question, how do you spot a card counter? Even if someone is card counting, the casino does not care as long they’re losing, so
[11:27] they don’t really pay attention to people until they’ve made some real money. Once they are, though, if a pit-boss notices that a player, for example, changes their bet from $100 to $1,000 right before a series of wins or as the shoe is close to finished,
[11:40] that’s a good sign that they know what the odds are. In addition, professional card-counters often start with a very large buy in—they convert a lot of money into chips—because there is natural variance on whether or not they
[11:53] They can win infinite money, but they can only lose as much money as they have, and even if they have an advantage, if they’re unlucky and they lose all their money, there’s The math works out so that, if you want to win $170 an hour card counting, you need to
[12:10] have $100,000 total in order to only have a 1% chance of running out of money. In the end, casinos don’t need to make it impossible to count cards.
[12:22] Only a small minority of people will attempt it and those that do can only make so much money per hour, so in a way, its a cost of doing business. To avoid it making a big dent in their profits, all they need to do is make advantage play
[12:35] at their tables just a little bit harder than those next door and, if this is the case, There will always be an escalating arms race by both players and casinos to gain an advantage
[12:48] Mathematics, economics, and human nature combined mean that as long as Blackjack and other flawed casino games stay popular, players will always find a way to tilt odds ever so slightly in
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