Baccarat
The basic goal in a game of baccarat is to assemble a
hand of two or three cards with a points value as close
to nine as possible. The ideal hand is one that the first
two cards valued together equal nine. Eight is the
second-best hand and, along with the nine, it constitutes
the only two "natural" hands.
The only hand that will beat a natural eight is a natural
nine. If any player hand or the Bank has a natural eight
or nine, the others may not draw a third card. In a tie,
bets are called off.
Aces count as one, picture cards as 10 and the others their face value.
If your hand total is in double figures, then the first figure is ignored.
So a hand totalling 18 would count as eight.
The player with the most money is usually the banker.
The banker deals three hands of two cards each, face down.
These hands are for two players, one to the right and one
the left of the banker, plus his own hand. Other players
at the table may bet on either hand (cheval) or both to beat the banker's
hand. If a player declares "banco",
it means they are betting the total value of the bank's
funds and all other bets are withdrawn.
If either player has a count less than eight or nine, he may stand
(saying "non") or get one more card face up (saying "carte").
The player must stand on six or seven and must draw on
four or less. Casinos usually take their percentage of the bank and
bets as their fee for the game.
These are the basics of baccarat, and like most table games,
the more you play, the better you get, so our best advice
at winning at baccarat would be to play, play, play, and
play some more.