Classic style blackjack

The object of the game is to draw cards that have 21 or more cards than the dealer.

Game conditions: six decks, each containing 52 cards, without the use of jokers, are involved in the game.

The card values are used to calculate the total number of points. An ace gives 1 or 11 points, and “pictures” and tens give 10 points, with the remaining cards giving the denominations.

Participation in the game requires the deposit of “cache” tokens into specific fields known as “boxes”. The game is allowed a maximum of one box. One to three people may play on a single box, and the player who places the first bet makes the decision. The total amount of bets in a single box may not exceed the table’s maximum bet, and each player’s bet may not be less than the table’s minimum bet.

At the very beginning of the game, the dealer deals two cards to each box in which the players are playing, as well as one card to himself in the open.

Black Jack is the oldest two-card combination, which can be made up of an Ace and a ten or an Ace and a “picture” from the first hand.

You make your decision based on the sum of the scores of the first two cards:

  • Don’t draw a card (stop), 
  • draw another card,
  • Take more opportunities.

If the dealer’s revealed card is not an Ace or Ten, the dealer immediately pays Black Jack at a 3:2 ratio and the cards remain with the dealer. In the case of a dealer Tuz, you have two choices: either the dealer must immediately pay the 1:1 bet, which means “equal money,” or the game continues. When playing in a box with two or three players, if the host of the box takes “Equal Money”, the other players will also be paid automatically. If the dealer’s first card is a ten or “picture”, the dealer only says BJ. In the case of a BJ, the dealer has no gain or loss.

After each player on the table has chosen his card, the dealer draws cards for himself for the “pot”. If the card is less than 17 points, the dealer must draw a card and stop if the card is 17 or more. In doing so, the Ace is counted by the dealer at the highest possible value, preventing an “overcall”. If the number of points in the box is greater than the dealer’s number of points, the bet pays one to one. If the dealer and the box have the same number of points, the bet remains on the “box” (“STAY”). The bet loses if the dealer’s point total is greater. The dealer pays all playing boxes if the dealer’s total points exceed 21 (“overcall”).