If you commit to using this approach you really want to have a sizable amount of money and awesome discipline to go away when you accrue a tiny success. For the benefit of this article, a figurative buy in of two thousand dollars is used.

The Horn Bet numbers are surely not seen as the "winning way to compete" and the horn bet itself has a casino advantage of over 12 %.

All you are playing is $5 on the pass line and a single number from the horn. It doesn’t matter if it is a "craps" or "yo" as long as you wager it routinely. The Yo is more prominent with people using this system for obvious reasons.

Buy in for two thousand dollars when you approach the table but only put $5.00 on the passline and one dollar on one of the two, three, eleven, or twelve. If it wins, awesome, if it loses press to two dollars. If it loses again, press to $4 and continue on to eight dollars, then to $16 and following that add a one dollar every time. Each time you don’t win, bet the previous wager plus a further dollar.

Using this scheme, if for example after fifteen tosses, the number you selected (11) hasn’t been tosses, you really should step away. However, this is what might develop.

On the 10th roll, you have a sum total of one hundred and twenty six dollars on the table and the YO finally hits, you come away with three hundred and fifteen dollars with a gain of one hundred and eighty nine dollars. Now is a good time to march away as it is higher than what you joined the game with.

If the YO does not hit until the twentieth roll, you will have a complete bet of $391 and seeing as current wager is at $31, you earn $465 with your profit of $74.

As you can see, using this scheme with just a $1.00 "press," your take becomes tinier the longer you gamble on without attaining a win. This is why you should leave away once you have won or you must wager a "full press" again and then advance on with the one dollar increase with each toss.

Carefully go over the numbers before you try this so you are very adept at when this approach becomes a non-winning proposition rather than a profitable one.