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Hi all. I’m very new to this forum, so my apologies if this was asked before. I looked at a few of the HCF threads but didn’t see this question so I’ll ask it:
For someone who insists on playing the side bets in HCF (I definitely insist on playing them ;) ), is there a proper ratio that will maximize your odds? The casino I play at is a Casino Rama in Orillia, Ontario, where the table stakes are:
$5 - $500 on the game itself
$1 - $300 on each of the side bets (4-7 card flush & 3 or more to straight flushes).
The odds they pay are (what I believe is) the standard odds:
Four card flush: 1-1
Five card flush: 10-1
Six card flush: 100-1
Seven card flush: 300-1
Three card SF: 7-1
Four card SF: 60-1
Five card SF: 100-1
Six card SF: 1000-1
Seven card SF: 8000-1
There is a maximum aggregate payout per spot on the table of $25,000 per hand, but with the odds of a 7-card SF being so low, and with my bankroll being small enough that I definitely won’t be playing above $25 per hand on either side bet my assumption is that this aggregate payout max should have no effect on the strategy. Thank you so much for any help!
As an aside, I work at another casino in Ontario and it was during training that I first learned about this game. It was lots of fun during training so I decided to go try it out at Rama. It definitely is a ton of fun, and on my first (and so far only) trip to go play it I was playing $15 & $15 on both the side bets and hit a six-card flush with a 3-card SF! $1600+ payout on the hand! So yeah, now I’m hooked ;)
A couple of readers have asked about Galaxy Gaming’s new High Card Flush game, which has a few placements now, and may be picking up some steam. The game is pretty simple, where each player and the dealer receive 7 cards. Each hand is measured by its highest flush, where a flush is first ranked by its length (number of cards of same suit), then by its card values. Each player must Ante before the hand, then wagers a 1x-3x Play bet (depending on flush size), or folds. The dealer qualifies with a three-card, 9-high flush. If the dealer doesn’t qualify, the Play bets push, and the remaining Antes are paid even-money. If the dealer qualifies, the Ante and Play bets receive even-money action against the dealer hand.
As you would expect, collusion helps in this game. A Monte Carlo analysis shows that with 6 confederates, perfect knowledge of the dealt cards gives each spot at least a +7.3% edge over the house. But practically, you’d be lucky if you could even communicate the suit counts (number of cards of each suit) dealt. If you figure out a non-suspicious way of doing this, then the following simple strategy yields a +3.1% edge over the house:
Flush Size | Play Bet |
---|---|
1 or 2 cards | 1x for suit counts (9, 11, 11, 11) or (10, 10, 11, 11), else fold others |
3 card, Jack-high or lower | 1x for suit counts (9, 11, 11, 11) or (10, 10, 11, 11), else fold others |
3 card, Queen-high | 1x if lowest suit count is 9 or higher, else fold. |
3 card, King-high or better | 1x if lowest suit count is 8 or higher, else fold. |
4 cards | 1x |
5 cards | 2x |
6 or 7 cards | 3x |
where the suit counts 4-tuple is the sorted number of cards of each suit.