Pro Gambler’s Secrets: How to Beat the Casino According to Mikki Mase
If you want to know how the sharpest advantage players approach the casino, you have to listen to the pros. Mikki Mase, a notorious professional gambler known for winning over $50 million and getting banned from casinos worldwide, recently shared his raw, unfiltered strategies.
His absolute Number One Rule? “Do not gamble.” However, if you are going to play, he insists you play with an edge. Casinos are designed to trap the uneducated player. To survive, you need strict discipline, zero ego, and a deep understanding of the mathematical advantages hidden in specific games.
Here is a complete breakdown of Mikki’s rules, the specific games he targets, and the exact casino traps you must watch out for.

🛑 General Casino Rules & What to Watch For
Before sitting down at any table, keep these overarching principles in mind:
- Leave Your Ego at the Door: Always play dumb. Ask the dealers “stupid” questions about the table rules. The dumber the casino staff thinks you are, the lazier they get with their manipulative tactics, making it easier for you to exploit them.
- Play High Limit if Possible: The rules in the low-limit areas are designed to bleed average players dry. High-limit tables cater to richer, smarter players, so the rules (like 3:2 blackjack payouts or dealer standing on soft 17) are mathematically better for the player.
- Play Aggressively and Fast: Play as big as you can afford, as aggressively as the math allows, and get out. The longer you stay, the more the house edge grinds you down.
- Set Strict Limits: Always walk into a casino with a hard “stop-loss” (when you walk away after losing a certain amount) and a “stop-win” (when you take your profits and leave).
- Avoid Side Bets: 99% of side bets are “sucker bets.” Never play them, with only two highly specific exceptions (mentioned below).
🃏 Game 1: Blackjack
Blackjack is the most popular game on the floor, but casinos use subtle variations to destroy your edge.

What to Watch Out For:
- Continuous Shuffle Machines (CSMs): These are the absolute worst. Usually found at low-limit tables, the dealer puts dead cards right back into a continuous shuffler. It speeds up the game (taking your money faster) and ruins any advantage play. Never play them.
- Dealer Bust Side Bets: Playing this makes you a “moron” in the eyes of the pros. It carries a massive house edge. Avoid it entirely.
- Bad Deck Counts: Avoid 8-deck shoes (terrible) and single-deck games (they only deal about 12 hands, wasting your time). 6-deck shoes are standard and okay. Double-Deck Blackjack is the holy grail for players; if you find it, play it.
The Winning Strategy:
- The Only Good Side Bet: “21+3” (a 3-card poker hand made of your two cards and the dealer’s up-card). Only play this if the casino offers a fixed 9:1 payout for all winning hands.
- Don’t Be a Coward on 16: If you have a 16 and the dealer shows a 7 or higher, hit. Standing on a 16 against a strong dealer card is a guaranteed slow loss. Go down swinging.
- Maximize Double Downs: Doubling down is where you make your money. Always double an 11. Your prime doubling range is when you hold a 9, 10, or 11 against a dealer’s 4, 5, or 6.
- Splitting: Always split Aces. Rarely split 8s. Conventional wisdom says to split 8s, but mathematically, you are turning one bad hand (16) into two potentially bad hands (18s), doubling your risk.
- Soft Hands (Ace-X): You need an average hand of 18.55 to win. Ace-8 (19) is a stand. Ace-7 (18) is tricky: stand against a dealer 7 or 8; hit against a 9 or 10; double against a 4, 5, or 6.
🀄 Game 2: Face-Up Pai Gow Poker
Pai Gow is a slower-paced game played with 7 cards, where you make a 5-card hand and a 2-card hand. Mikki specifically recommends Face-Up Pai Gow, where the dealer’s cards are exposed first.

What to Watch Out For:
- Standard (Face-Down) Pai Gow: Avoid this. You lose the massive advantage of seeing the dealer’s hand, and you are forced to pay a commission on wins. Casinos give you your change in small chips to psychologically trick you into making careless bets with your “nuisance” chips.
The Winning Strategy:
- Play the Bonus: This is the only other game where side bets make mathematical sense. Because you get 7 cards, it is incredibly easy to hit bonus hands (straights, flushes, full houses, etc.).
- The “Push” Strategy: Bet equally on your main hand (e.g., $1,000) and your bonus side bet (e.g., $1,000). Because you see the dealer’s hand first in Face-Up Pai Gow, you can intentionally set your hand to ensure a “Push” (you win one hand, the dealer wins the other, and you break even).
- Grind for the Bonus: By continuously pushing the main bet, you preserve your bankroll while giving yourself endless free opportunities to hit massive payouts on the bonus side bet.
🤠 Game 3: Ultimate Texas Hold’em (UTH)
Ultimate Texas Hold’em is a carnival table game where you play against the house, not other players. Mikki details a highly controversial (but legal) “advantage play” strategy that requires teamwork.

What to Watch Out For:
- The 45-Minute Trap: Casino auto-shufflers are notoriously streaky. Mikki claims they allow players to win early on to suck them in, and then suddenly start dealing “coolers” (e.g., giving you a full house but giving the dealer a bigger full house).
- Time Limit: Never play this game for more than 30 to 45 minutes. Hit the table, execute the strategy, and leave before the math turns against you.
The Winning Strategy (The 5-Man Syndicate):
- Pool Your Money: Get four friends. Pool your money evenly before entering the casino.
- Take Over the Table: Find an empty 5-seat UTH table and occupy every single seat. Act entirely like strangers. Do not speak to each other about the strategy.
- Standardize Your Bets: Everyone must bet the exact same unit size every single hand. If one person deviates, the math fails and you lose money.
- Card Counting via Outs: Because you control all the player cards at the table, you have a massive information advantage. Glance at your friends’ hands to calculate your “outs.”
- Example: You are dealt Pocket Aces. Normally, you would bet 4x (Max Bet). However, you look around and see your friends are holding the other two Aces. You have zero chance of improving. Instead of betting 4x, you safely check it down.
- Example: You are dealt a 4 and 5 of Hearts. You look around and see none of your friends have any Hearts, 4s, 5s, 6s, or 3s. Your suit is completely “live.” You hammer the 4x Max Bet because your statistical probability of hitting a straight or flush is artificially massive.
- Cash Out and Split: One friend might lose it all, another might win huge. It doesn’t matter. Leave after 45 minutes, meet back at home, combine the chips, and split the profit five ways.
Disclaimer: The strategies discussed are for informational and entertainment purposes based on the advice of professional gambler Mikki Mase. Always gamble responsibly and within your legal jurisdiction.


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