Can you play more than one hand of blackjack at once?

You are not limited to one hand per round. Multi-hand blackjack lets you spread bets across several hands at once, all facing the same dealer, which many players enjoy for the faster pace and the chance to apply strategy across a whole row of hands.

Quick answer: Yes. In multi-hand blackjack you play two, three or more hands at the same time against one dealer, each with its own bet. You also create extra hands whenever you split a pair. Playing several hands does not change the odds of any single hand, but it does speed up the action and swing your chip total faster.

How multi-hand works

In Multi-Hand Blackjack, you place a bet on each of several boxes and receive a separate hand in each. You play them one at a time - hitting, standing or doubling each - then the dealer plays once against all of them. Each hand wins or loses on its own.

Splitting creates hands too

Even in a single-hand game, splitting a pair turns one hand into two, and re-splitting can create up to four. Each split hand gets its own bet and is played independently, which is really a form of playing multiple hands within one round.

Does it change your odds?

No. Each hand still faces the same house edge, so more hands means more total action, not better odds per hand. It simply raises the swings - wins and losses arrive faster. Since these are free play chips, it is a fun, risk-free way to practice.

Related questions

When should you split pairs in blackjack?

The two golden rules are: always split Aces and always split 8s, and never split 10s or 5s. Other pairs depend on the dealer's card - split 2s, 3s, 6s, 7s and 9s mainly when the dealer shows a weak card. Splitting turns a pair into two separate hands, each with its own bet.

How are chips and bankroll scored on Blackjack.ooo?

Everything on Blackjack.ooo is free play-money chips. You start with a chip balance, bet chips each hand, and win or lose them based on the results - a blackjack pays 3 to 2, a win pays even money, a push returns your bet. There are no deposits, no real money, and no cashouts. Chips are just a score for fun and practice.

How do you play blackjack?

You place a bet and get two cards, then add up their values to get as close to 21 as you can without going over. Number cards count their face value, face cards count 10, and an Ace is 1 or 11. You choose to hit for more cards or stand, then the dealer plays a fixed way. The hand closest to 21, without busting, wins.