If you choose to use this approach you need to have a very big amount of money and incredible discipline to go away when you earn a small win. For the purposes of this article, a figurative buy in of $2,000 is used.
The Horn Bet numbers are surely not looked at as the "winning way to wager" and the horn bet itself has a house edge of over twelve percent.
All you are playing is five dollars on the pass line and a single number from the horn. It does not matter whether it is a "craps" or "yo" as long as you play it constantly. The Yo is more dominant with gamblers using this system for obvious reasons.
Buy in for two thousand dollars when you join the table but put only five dollars on the passline and one dollar on either the two, three, eleven, or twelve. If it wins, excellent, if it loses press to $2. If it does not win again, press to $4 and then to eight dollars, then to sixteen dollars and following that add a one dollar every subsequent wager. Each time you don’t win, bet the last value plus an additional dollar.
Employing this approach, if for example after 15 tosses, the number you bet on (11) has not been tosses, you likely should step away. Although, this is what possibly could develop.
On the 10th roll, you have a total of $126 in the game and the YO at long last hits, you earn $315 with a profit of $189. Now is a good time to walk away as it is higher than what you entered the game with.
If the YO doesn’t hit until the twentieth roll, you will have a total bet of $391 and seeing as current action is at $31, you gain $465 with your profit being $74.
As you can see, using this scheme with just a $1.00 "press," your profit margin becomes smaller the more you wager on without attaining a win. This is why you have to walk away once you have won or you have to wager a "full press" once more and then advance on with the $1.00 increase with each toss.
Carefully go over the data before you try this so you are very familiar at when this approach becomes a non-winning proposition instead of a winning one.