Casinos don't want people counting cards at blackjack because casinos don't want to lose money. If a casino suspects a player is card counting, they will start to keep a close eye on the player and analyze the action. They want to see if the player is a significant threat before they go through the disruptive process of asking him/her to leave.
Assuming you're playing at high enough stakes to matter to the casino, and you're keeping an accurate count, and playing your hands correctly, and betting correctly, the casino may then decide to ask you to stop playing. There are many ways they may handle this.
As a professional blackjack player I have been asked to leave casinos a handful of times. Here are my personal experiences...
1. The casino might just ask you to stop playing blackjack, but allow you to stay in the casino and play other games. They say something like "you're just too good". They'll never say you're counting cards.
2. The casino might nicely ask you to leave the property. They'll usually tell you that you're no longer allowed at any of their sister properties either.
3. The casino might be a little more aggressive and rudely tell you to get out. Contrary to what you see in the movies, nobody is going to touch you as long as you walk out of the casino. The last thing a casino wants is a lawsuit from being physical with a patron.
When asked to leave a casino you are allowed to keep your chips. The casino will not try to take your money. Card counting is not illegal and is not considered cheating.
Note: Casinos in Atlantic City by law are not allowed to make players leave due to card counting. They will simply try to worsen the game conditions so that the game becomes unprofitable. Casinos in Las Vegas can ask card counters to leave because the casinos are private property and are legally allowed to refuse service to anyone they want.
Casinos dislike card counters because they use skill and strategy to gain an advantage over the house, which goes against the casino's goal of making a profit from players. Card counting can lead to significant financial losses for the casino, so they take measures to identify and discourage this behavior.
Card counting is a strategy that helps a player determine what the next hand is likely to be, giving them an advantage over the dealer. There are two methods that oen can use including Basic and the High-Low system.
The spell counters will be lost, they will not be transferred to the new monster.
Any card that actually uses Spell Counters will tell you what to do with them. Breaker the Magical Warrior tells you what his own counter does, while cards like Megaton Magical Cannon say to remove spell counters from other cards.
'Counters' in Yu-Gi-Oh are markers added to a card by various effects. Because different cards can place Counters, the counters are often named, these names are just to distinguish themselves from one another. So Spell Counter, A-Counter, Shine Counter. The Counters themselves actually have no effect unless an effect is granted to them by something else in play. They are just markers. So if you take the card 'Realm of Light', it places counters on itself, and it calls these counters 'Shine Counters' to make clear that only these counters work with its effect, counters with other names do not. Apart from what Realm of Light says these counters do, there are no special rules associated with a 'Shine Counter', it's just the name for the markers this particular card uses.
Ki counters are simply regular counters that most commonly apply to spirit or arcane cards. For example, a card may say: Whenever another spirit creature comes into play, put a ki counter on "this card", remove two ki counters from "this card" put a 1/1 spirit creature token into play. This is just one example, ki counters are mostly accumulated from spirit or arcane cards and have a variety of different effects.
When you trigger an effect that says to put a spell counter on a card that can accepts spell counters.You can add as many counters per turn as possible, there is no limit. You put a counter on a card when the effect of a card tells you to do so (such as Breaker the Magical Warrior when it is Normal Summoned or Royal Magical Library when a Spell card is activated.)
In Magic: The Gathering, planeswalker loyalty counters start at a specific number indicated on the card. Players can use abilities to increase or decrease these counters. If a planeswalker's loyalty reaches 0 or less, it is put into the graveyard. Players can activate a planeswalker's abilities by adding or subtracting loyalty counters as indicated on the card.
Yes, as long as that card can be given spell counters.
In Magic: The Gathering, counters do not cancel each other out in gameplay. Each counter represents a different effect or condition on a card or permanent, and they can coexist on the same card or permanent.
There are no "tricks" in Blackjack. The term you are referring to is "5 card charlie", and no most casinos do not pay on it.
In ye olden days, a cut card wasn't used to protect the bottom card on a double or single deck hand. It was the top card, which was wrapped to the bottom of the deck. This protected the deck from card counters. While cut cards now protect the deck, 1 or more cards are burned to throw off card counters.