Casino employees frequently reference chips as "cheques," which is of French ancestry. Technically, there is a difference between a chip and a cheque. A cheque is just a chip with a value printed on it and is forever worth the value of the imprinted denomination. Chips, on the other hand, don’t have values printed on them and the value is determined by the croupier. For example, in a poker table, the casino might define white chips as $1 and blue chips as 10 dollars; at the same time, at a roulette game, the casino might define white chips as 25 cents and blue chips at $2. A further example, the cheap red, white, and blue poker chips you buy at Wal-Mart for your Friday-night poker game are called "chips" due to the fact that they don’t have denominations written on them.
When you plop your money down and hear the dealer announce, "Cheque change only," he’s basically telling the boxman that a new bettor wish to change cash for chips (cheques), and that the cash sitting on the table isn’t in play. Cash plays in many betting houses, so if you put a five dollar bill down on the Pass Line just before the player rolls the pair of dice and the dealer doesn’t change your cash for chips, your cash is "live" and "in play."
In reality, in actual craps games, we play with cheques, not chips. Every now and then, an individual will approach the table, put down a $100 cheque, and inform the croupier, "Cheque change." It is amusing to act like a new player and ask the croupier, "Hey, I am a brand-new to this game, what is a cheque?" Generally, their crazy responses will entertain you.
Filed under: Craps -
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