CasinoCityTimes.com

Home
Gaming Strategy
Featured Stories
News
Newsletter
Legal News Financial News Casino Opening and Remodeling News Gaming Industry Executives Author Home Author Archives Author Books Search Articles Subscribe
Newsletter Signup
Stay informed with the
NEW Casino City Times newsletter!
Recent Articles
Best of Frank Scoblete
author's picture
 

Baccarat versus Mini Baccarat

11 November 2014

Baccarat (pronounced bah-cah-rah, not back-a-rat) and mini-baccarat are not the exact same games owing to slight changes in their formats and their speeds. Indeed, baccarat is a good game to play while mini-baccarat can be a dangerous game to play.

Baccarat is usually played in high roller rooms on a large table that can fit at least 12 players; the game often has $100 minimum bets, and at least three dealers plus a floor person working the table. The players also get to deal the cards as well – a really fun benefit of the game. Baccarat is leisurely and elegant; it’s the true game of James Bond. Sometimes this form of baccarat is called “Big Bac” to reflect the fact that it is played on a big table.

Mini-baccarat (also known as “Mini Bac”) is played on a much smaller table; often the size of a blackjack table or slightly larger. You have one dealer and that dealer is the only one who touches and deals the cards. Players do not touch the cards. The game is fast, perhaps the fastest table game in the casino. The faster the game, the better for the casino. So small house edges can become deadly house edges of the game goes into super-fast motion.

The objective of both games is to correctly guess which of three possible propositions will win: Bank, Player, or Tie (the Tie bet is so bad that it should never be made; just forget it exists). Two cards are dealt to the Bank hand and two cards are dealt to the Player hand. Sometimes a third card is dealt to either or both hands. The rules for hitting and standing are absolute; no decisions are to be made by the players or casino.

Whichever hand is nine or closest to nine is the winner. A two-card hand of nine and a two-card hand of eight are considered naturals and do not take any hits. The nine beats the eight.

In baccarat the deal goes counterclockwise around the table. The player who is dealing continues to deal as long as the Bank hand keeps winning – even though the player-dealer does not have to bet the Bank hand. As soon as a Player hand wins, the next player gets to deal.

A winning Player hand is paid off at one to one; bet $100, you win $100. A winning Bank bet pays $95 for $100 because a five percent commission is collected on that $100. The Tie hand is paid at eight to one. If you bet on either Bank or Player and the Tie wins, it is a push.

Since I ignore the Tie bet, the house edge on the Bank bet is 1.17 percent (a loss of $1.17 per $100 wagered) and the edge on the Player bet is 1.36 percent (a loss of $1.36 per $100 wagered).


Mini-Baccarat

Because players do not touch the cards or deal the cards, mini-baccarat is based on how fast a casino dealer can deal. And that is extremely fast. The number of hands in Mini Bac can often range from 120 to almost 200! You’ll never find anything close to that number of decisions in Big Bac. Based on my scouting, I’d say a player faces about 40 decisions in baccarat.

Many casinos have eliminated the Big Bac tables or reduced their action to weekends. By doing so, they save on dealers’ salaries, and make more money too as they can have several tables going around the clock. So most players will discover that the lower, mid-sized tables will be open for business composed of one dealer dealing like lightning. Keep in mind with smaller minimums more players will venture to the Mini Bac tables.

The following chart will show you how much you can expect to win or lose in Big Bac and Mini Bac given one and four hours of play. I am using a house edge of 1.26 percent assuming some combination of betting Bank and Player. Note that if you bet the same amount at Mini-Bac ($100) as you do in Big Bac your losses increase tremendously.

Game Minimum
Bet Number of decisions Expectation per hour Expectation per 4 hours
Big Bac $100 40 $50.40 $201.60
Mini Bac $100 120 $151.20 $604.80
Mini-Bac $25 120 37.80 $151.20
Mini Bac $10 120 $15.12 $60.48
Mini Bac $100 150 $189 $756
Mini Bac $25 150 $47.25 $189
Mini Bac $10 150 $18.90 $75.60



How much should you budget to play these games? I’d speculate that for Big Bac the minimum session bankroll should be 20 units ($100 X 20 = $2,000); for Mini Bac it should be 40 units ($10 X 40 = $400).

I have a complete analysis of baccarat in my book "Casino Conquest: How to Beat the Casinos at Their Own Games!"


Frank Scoblete's newest books are Confessions of a Wayward Catholic and I Am a Card Counter. Available from Amazon.com, Kindle or at bookstores. Join Frank on his web site at www.frankscoblete.com
Frank Scoblete

Frank Scoblete is the #1 best selling gaming author in America. His newest books are Slots Conquest: How to Beat the Slot Machines; Everything Casino Poker: Get the Edge at Video Poker, Texas Hold'em, Omaha Hi-Lo and Pai Gow Poker!; Beat Blackjack Now: The Easiest Way to Get the Edge; Casino Craps: Shoot to Win!; Cutting Edge Craps: Advanced Strategies for Serious Players; Casino Conquest: Beat the Casinos at Their Own Games! and The Virgin Kiss.

Frank and Casino City Times columnist Jerry "Stickman" teach private lessons in dice control. Frank's books are available at Amazon.com, in bookstores or by mail order. Call 1-800-944-0406 or write to Frank Scoblete Enterprises, PO Box 446, Malverne, NY 11565. Frank can also be reached by email at fscobe@optonline.net.

Frank Scoblete Websites:

www.goldentouchcraps.com
www.goldentouchblackjack.com

Books by Frank Scoblete:

> More Books By Frank Scoblete

Frank Scoblete
Frank Scoblete is the #1 best selling gaming author in America. His newest books are Slots Conquest: How to Beat the Slot Machines; Everything Casino Poker: Get the Edge at Video Poker, Texas Hold'em, Omaha Hi-Lo and Pai Gow Poker!; Beat Blackjack Now: The Easiest Way to Get the Edge; Casino Craps: Shoot to Win!; Cutting Edge Craps: Advanced Strategies for Serious Players; Casino Conquest: Beat the Casinos at Their Own Games! and The Virgin Kiss.

Frank and Casino City Times columnist Jerry "Stickman" teach private lessons in dice control. Frank's books are available at Amazon.com, in bookstores or by mail order. Call 1-800-944-0406 or write to Frank Scoblete Enterprises, PO Box 446, Malverne, NY 11565. Frank can also be reached by email at fscobe@optonline.net.

Frank Scoblete Websites:

www.goldentouchcraps.com
www.goldentouchblackjack.com

Books by Frank Scoblete:

> More Books By Frank Scoblete