bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
I was having a discussion with AI about blackjack. As we all know the odds favor the dealer. Out of a hundred hands the average would be the dealer wins about 48, and the player wins about 44, and about 8 pushes. Granted that's just an average, and streaks happen. Now here is the conundrum:
The likelihood of the dealer winning all 100 hands (Given normal betting practices) is next to zero (Not impossible, but almost). AI agrees with this. As the winning streak continues beyond the normal 48, the unlikeliness of winning the next hand in the streak increases. AI agrees with this. However, even if the dealer has won 99 out of 100 hands, the odds of winning the next hand are still a constant in the dealer's favor at 48% as opposed to 44%. AI says this is true.
According to what it tells me, each hand is totally independent of the one before it (Assuming one isn't counting cards and making strategic bets).
On the other hand, streaks are not independent. The longer they continue, the more unlikely they become.
The problem is I can't reconcile those two seeming contradictions, but I am assured they are both true. If the dealer has won 90 hands in a row, and it is extremely unlikely that streak would continue with the next hand, then how are the odds not changed for that next hand?
The likelihood of the dealer winning all 100 hands (Given normal betting practices) is next to zero (Not impossible, but almost). AI agrees with this. As the winning streak continues beyond the normal 48, the unlikeliness of winning the next hand in the streak increases. AI agrees with this. However, even if the dealer has won 99 out of 100 hands, the odds of winning the next hand are still a constant in the dealer's favor at 48% as opposed to 44%. AI says this is true.
According to what it tells me, each hand is totally independent of the one before it (Assuming one isn't counting cards and making strategic bets).
On the other hand, streaks are not independent. The longer they continue, the more unlikely they become.
The problem is I can't reconcile those two seeming contradictions, but I am assured they are both true. If the dealer has won 90 hands in a row, and it is extremely unlikely that streak would continue with the next hand, then how are the odds not changed for that next hand?
