He says even though he's losing this game, he's enjoying the scrap, and can afford to take it another round so he's not changing the offer! Ergo...
12 - 50p! He might regret that now... 14 - £10! He probably will regret that now... 15 - 1p! He almost certainly will regret that now... only one blue!
Unfortunately it is the 10p, and as such is associated with a huge downward shift possibility. That's all that can save the Banker now...
£48,000 is increasing...
...to £170,000!!
In that round, you actually added more than £120,000 to the board!!!
10p £3,000 £10,000 £20,000 £75,000 £100,000 £170,000 £250,001
The Banker said he thought he could afford another round, but not one like that!!
Banker's offer:
£64,000
If you take out the 10p in this round, you are guaranteed to increase one of the other box values at the shift. However, you are not necessarily guaranteed £3,000, because assuming you have at least one red in the final two (and the only way you won't now is if you keep the 10p to the end and it causes another value which you also keep to the end to shift below £1,000) you will be offered the Seventh Shift, which will cause either of the two amounts to either increase or decrease by a massive amount, regardless of what they are. So, for instance, if you finished with £10,000 and £100,000 and took on the Seventh Shift, the £100,000 could increase to as much as £750,000, and the £10,000 to as much as £350,000, or either of them could become a blue. You aren't committed to the Seventh Shift, it is entirely your decision, one you will make whether or not you are in active play. (A Banker's Gamble from a proveout Seventh Shift produced our biggest ever win...)
But in the here and now, £64,000 is the offer.
_________________ Champion of RTaB S6, creator of unorthodox DoND rulesets, and founder member of #teambat. Creator of the first DoND Live offer to be accepted. "Why regret what could not be?" (A Heart Full of Love, from Les Misérables) I introduced utility theory to the forums. Blame me. In your choices, beware of words leading you astray. Think in a balanced way about potential gains and losses.
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