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Casino War

Highest card wins. Tie? Go to war. Simplest casino game ever made.

RTP97.1%
House edge2.9%
Complexity○○○○

Casino War is the simplest casino game in existence. Dealer deals one card to you, one to herself. High card wins, full stop. Aces are high. If you tie, you can either surrender (lose half your bet) or "go to war" (double your bet, dealer burns 3 cards, deals one card each — high card wins; if war ties, you win 2x your war bet).

It exists because slots-only players sometimes want to try a table game without learning blackjack or 21's subtle decisions. The math is unforgiving — house edge is 2.88% if you always go to war, and a punishing 3.7% if you always surrender on tie.

The "tie" bet on the side, which pays 10:1 if you tie the dealer, has an 18.65% house edge. Don't take it.

Bet types & payouts
Win the initial card1:1 (you win this ~46.3% of the time)
Tie + go to war + win1:1 on the war bet, push on initial bet
Tie + go to war + tie again2:1 on war bet (rare — 0.06%)
Tie + surrenderLose half your bet
Tie side bet10:1 (18.65% house edge — sucker bet)

Strategy notes

Always go to war on a tie — never surrender. Skip the tie side bet. The game has nothing else to learn.

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For entertainment only. No real money. The virtual chips on this page have no cash value and cannot be redeemed, traded, exchanged, or converted. We do not accept deposits, hold funds, or process withdrawals. 21+. If gambling is a problem for you, call 1-800-GAMBLER or visit ncpgambling.org.

About Casino War

RTP97.16%
House edge2.84%

Overview

Casino War is the simplest game on the floor — you and the dealer each get one card, high card wins, ties go to "war." Despite the simplicity, the house edge of 2.84% is significant and a Tie bet (17:1) carries an absurd 18.65% house edge. Casino War is a tourist game; it's listed here for completeness but it shouldn't be your primary play.

How to play

You and the dealer each receive one card from a standard 52-card deck (typically dealt from a six-deck shoe). Aces are high. Higher card wins, paying 1:1. If both cards have the same rank, you have two choices: surrender (forfeit half your bet) or go to "war" — place an additional bet equal to your original, the dealer "burns" three cards, and you each receive one more card. On war, your war-bet pays 1:1 if you win, but your original Ante pushes — meaning a war win only pays 1x your Ante even though you've doubled your exposure. War losses cost you both bets.

Optimal strategy

Always go to war on a tie; never surrender. Going to war has a slightly lower house edge (~2.88%) than surrendering (~3.7%). Avoid the Tie side bet (which pays 10:1 or 17:1 depending on the casino) — its house edge is over 18% in most paytables, among the worst in the casino. There is no other meaningful strategic decision; the game is otherwise pure luck.

The math behind the house edge

Casino War is a binomial game with three outcomes: win (47%), lose (47%), tie (6%). On a tie, the war resolution roughly splits 50/50, but the "burn three cards" mechanic and the asymmetric payout on war (you only collect 1x Ante on a war win) build in the house edge. Variance is low and the game is fast — typically 70-100 decisions per hour, making bankroll burn aggressive even at modest stakes.

Origin & history

Casino War debuted in the mid-1990s as casinos searched for simple, low-skill table games to attract slot players. It descends from the children's card game "War" but with a casino-favorable resolution to ties.

Payout table

BetPayoutNotes
Win (high card)1:1Standard win
War — Win1:1 on war bet, push on AnteAsymmetric — house edge mechanism
Tie side bet10:1 or 17:1~18% house edge — skip

Bankroll & session tips

  • Set a session loss limit before you start playing — typically 2-5% of your monthly entertainment budget. Walk away when you hit it.
  • Flat-bet 1-2% of your roll per round. Progressive betting systems (Martingale, Fibonacci) do not change the house edge and accelerate ruin.
  • Track your sessions. Short sessions can swing wildly even at optimal play; long-run results converge close to the published RTP.
  • Take breaks. Tilt — emotional play after losses — bleeds bankroll faster than bad strategy.
  • Variance is real. A 2.84% house edge does not mean you'll lose 2.84% every session — it means that's the long-run average. Individual sessions vary wildly.