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Games 2013
A Game-Theoretic Analysis of Baccara Chemin de FerDOI: 10.3390/g4040711 Keywords: baccara, chemin de fer, sampling without replacement, matrix game, strict dominance, kernel, solution Abstract: Assuming that cards are dealt with replacement from a single deck and that each of Player and Banker sees the total of his own two-card hand but not its composition, baccara is a 2 x 2 88 matrix game, which was solved by Kemeny and Snell in 1957. Assuming that cards are dealt without replacement from a d-deck shoe and that Banker sees the composition of his own two-card hand while Player sees only his own total, baccara is a 2 x 2 484 matrix game, which was solved by Downton and Lockwood in 1975 for d = 1, 2, . . . , 8. Assuming that cards are dealt without replacement from a d-deck shoe and that each of Player and Banker sees the composition of his own two-card hand, baccara is a 2 5 x 2 484 matrix game, which is solved herein for every positive integer d.
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