The 3 BEST Card Peeks (Bubble Peek, Pinky Break Peek, Convincing Control Peek Tutorial)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 พ.ย. 2024
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🧢 Check out the rfsleights merch: www.rfsleights... I really appreciate you taking some time to watch this tutorial. It’s filled with details because it needs to be. There is so much that goes into convincing sleight of hand and deception. I implore you to watch it all as even if you’re more experienced, there will be something for you to take away from this. Here are 3 great ways to peek a card! The next video will be a great effect which you can perform using these peaks. Enjoy!
Bubble Peek: 1:18
Pinky Break Peek: 10:50
Convincing Control Peek: 19:01
Uses & Other Ideas: 21:19
Decks used in this video: Red Monarch playing Cards by Theory 11
Contact me if you need any help or have any questions/ideas on any of the material. I am happy to help!
Email: rf.sleights@gmail.com
IG: rfsleights
Intro music by: @rari458
Disclaimer: I try my best to credit and acknowledge everything that I have taken from and been inspired by with my magic and sleights. Any ideas that I claim as my own are simply ideas that have come to me independently, but I do not claim that they are completely original. If you have any information on similar work/ideas or acknowledgements that I have missed, please let me know.
#MAGIC #CARDMAGIC #TUTORIAL #SLEIGHTOFHAND #DECEPTION
I counted cards for years in Vegas and elsewhere. New dealers using the bubble-peek would roll their deck hand methodically to the point that it stood out as suspicious. Many of the players are carefully watching the dealer's hands for clues of cheating so it doesn't take long for them to recognize the recurring pattern of rolling their deck hand over, even if they appear to be doing it legitimately while checking their hole card. One of the variations I ran across was fairly obvious as well, especially because the dealer using it was greedy and doing it on virtually every hand. It was a female dealer with glasses that kept sliding down her nose such that she had to frequently reach up with her deck hand to push them back in place. As ill-fitting glasses are a familiar nuisance, sliding them back into place doesn't typically create a lot of suspicion and appears to be a justifiable exercise. But as she did that, her hand just naturally rolled into a position necessary to grasp her glasses at the hinge to push them back into place. That hand position also conveniently gave her a birds-eye view of the bubble she created as she was raising her hand up to adjust her glasses. It didn't take long for me to catch on because I played a lot of blackjack but the average tourist probably never suspected that her ill-fitting glasses were causing them to lose their money at a rate that far exceeded any that the average person would ordinarily expect to lose. There was no other slight of hand I could detect but likely none was needed. Knowing the top card provides substantial control of the game. If it's a card that would make her hand, she would deal seconds all around the table and then give herself the top card. If it was a card that would break her, she could deal seconds until she came to a player with a breakable hand and give it to them. She could then re-peek the deck part way through the hand and possibly break more players, give the card to herself if desirable, or deal herself a second if the top card would break her. Those options alone allowed her to increase her take exponentially compared to the 5-10% advantage she already had against the average player.
Very cool story thanks for sharing!
@@ReidFerry Thanks. It was fun reminiscing about the 'good old days'. :)