Blackjack is a game that somehow reminds me of a wild ride. It’s a game that starts slowly, but gradually gets faster. As you slowly build up your bank roll, you feel as though you are on your way to the top of the coaster and then when you aren’t expecting it, the bottom falls.
Blackjack is so very similar to a crazy ride the similarities are frightening. As with the popular fair experience, your black jack game will peak and things will appear as though they are going great for a time before it bottoms out once again. Of course you have to be a gambler who can adjust well to the ups and downs of the game simply because the game of black jack is choked full of them.
If you like the tiny coaster, a coaster that doesn’t go too high or fast, then bet small. If you find the only way you can enjoy the coaster ride is with a larger bet, then hop on board for the mad ride of your life on the monster coaster. The big money player will love the view from the monster roller coaster because he or she is not thinking about the drop as they rush headlong to the top of the game.
A win goal and a loss limit works well in black jack, but very few gamblers adhere to it. In black jack, if you "get on the rollercoaster" as it’s going up, that’s awesome, but when the cards "go south" and the coaster begins to flip and turn, you had better bail out in a hurry.
If you do not, you might not remember how much you enjoyed everything while your bank roll was "up". The only thing you will remember is a lot of uncertainties, a cool ride … your head in the air. As you are reminiscing on "what ifs", you won’t remember how "high up" you went but you will clearly remember that disastrous fall as clear as day.