[ English ]

Through out your craps-betting experience, you will certainly have more losing encounters than winners. Go along with it. You have to learn to wager in the real world, not in fantasy land. Craps is developed for the participant to not win.

Let us say, after 2 hours, the ivories have whittled your bankroll down to $20. You have not observed a hot roll in a long time. Although losing is as much a part of craps as winning, you can not help but feel crappy. You begin to wonder why you even bothered heading to sin city in the first place. You were solid for two hours, but it didn’t work. You are looking to win so much that you lose control of your clear thinking. You’re down to your last twenty dollars for the session and you have little fight left. Walk away!

You must never capitulate, never surrender, never believe, "This sucks, I am going to put the rest on the Hard 4 and, if I am defeated, then I will head out. But if I succeed, I will be right back where I began." That’s the most brainless action you can perform at the close of a non-winning night.

If you can not accept not winning, you have no reason to be wagering. If you can not bear losing a particular game, then quit that session and call it a night. Do not throw your cash away on a appalling wager wishing to hit it large and win your $$$$ back all at once.

If it is an awful game and you are deprived of a lot quickly, then accept defeat and cash out with the $10, $15, or twenty dollars that you have remaining. Take that leftover $20, have a beverage in the bar, enjoy the band. Play it in a nickel video poker machine and perhaps get a one thousand-coin win for 50 dollars. Place it in your wallet, locate your lady, and spend some time with her. Don’t relent. Do something besides pee your money away on a losing proposition wager. Do not toss in the towel.