Black Jack is a casino game that reminds me a little of a rollercoaster. It’s a game that starts off slow but gradually gets faster. As you build up your chips, you feel like you’re getting to the top of the rollercoaster and then when you least expect it, the bottom drops out.
Black Jack is so much like a coaster the similarities are scary. As with the favorite fairground ride, your pontoon game will reach the top and things will be going fine for a time before it drops down again. You have to be a player that can adjust favorably to the highs and lows of the casino game because the game of black jack is full of them.
If you prefer the tiny coaster, one that does not go too high or fast, then wager small. If you find the only way you can enjoy the ride is with a larger gamble, then jump on board for the ride of your life on the monster coaster. The high roller will really like the view from the colossal coaster because he or she is not considering the drop as they speed head first to the top of the casino game.
A success objective and a loss limit works well in blackjack, but very few bettors stick to it. In chemin de fer, if you "get on the rollercoaster" as it is going up, that’s terrific, but when the cards "go south" and the coaster begins to twist and turn, you’d best better bail out in a hurry.
If you do not, you will not recall how much you relished the sights while your bank roll was "up". The only element you’ll recall is a tonne of uncertainties, a thrilling adventure and your head in the sky. As you’re thinking on "what ifs" you will not recall how "high up" you were but you will remember that disastrous drop as clear as day.
Pontoon can be a very beatable game. It is a game of highs, a game of crashes and where it will halt is entirely up to you and how well you are able to calculate whether to jump off the rollercoaster or continue the ride.