Sin City Supply Store
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Books » General » Busting Vegas: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees  
Like This Store? Don't forget a Gift Card For Your Favorite Person !

Busting Vegas: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees

Busting Vegas: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees

zoom enlarge 
Author: Ben Mezrich
Publisher: William Morrow
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy Used: $0.42
You Save: $24.53 (98%)

Qty 1 In Stock


New (26) Used (89) Collectible (7) from $0.42

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 56 reviews
Sales Rank: 338567

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.2

ISBN: 0060575115
Dewey Decimal Number: 795.092
EAN: 9780060575113
ASIN: 0060575115

Publication Date: October 1, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Busting Vegas: A True Story of Monumental Excess, Sex, Love, Violence, and Beating the Odds
  • Hardcover - Busting Vegas: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees
  • Audio Download - Busting Vegas: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees
  • Audio CD - Busting Vegas CD: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees
  • Audio CD - Busting Vegas CD: The MIT Whiz Kid Who Brought the Casinos to Their Knees
  • Kindle Edition - Busting Vega$

Similar Items:

  • Bringing Down the House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T. Students Who Took Vegas for Millions
  • Rigged: The True Story of an Ivy League Kid Who Changed the World of Oil, from Wall Street to Dubai
  • Ugly Americans: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboys Who Raided the Asian Markets for Millions
  • Beat the Dealer: A Winning Strategy for the Game of Twenty-One
  • Liar's Poker: Rising Through the Wreckage on Wall Street

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Semyon Dukach couldn't believe how easy the money was. In one weekend, the MIT math genius and his team of geeks had made $200,000 playing the blackjack tables in Las Vegas. They hadn't cheated. Instead, they had discovered one of humanity's greatest holy grails: a system to beat the casino. They had rendered obsolete the old saying that the house always wins. Dukach and his friends made millions during the 1990s playing blackjack in the world's top casinos, right under the noses of pit bosses and security consultants who thought they had seen it all. Dukach's story is told in author Ben Mezrich's vividly narrated book Busting Vegas.

Mezrich, the author of previous bestsellers about MIT gamblers and a colorful Ivy League trader in Japan, tells how Dukach's crew used a system that Vegas had never seen before. Dukach, the son of Russian immigrants who grew up in the poorest neighborhoods of New Jersey and Houston, was determined to climb out of poverty and help his family. His system didn't involve the commonly used techniques of card counting. Posing as an arms dealer or dentist, Dukach deliberately sought out blackjack dealers with small hands or thin fingers who frequently didn't conceal the bottom card when they shuffled the cards. Dukach would often manage to get a glimpse at the bottom card. This was highly significant because it was the card the dealer would hand the player to cut the deck. Dukach had practiced a technique to insert the card in a precise spot in the deck and then make big bets when the card was dealt. Dukach and his team ended up barred from casinos, threatened at gunpoint, and beaten in Vegas's notorious back rooms. This is a riveting yarn. Alex Roslin

Product Description

He played in casinos around the world with a plan to make himself richer than anyone could possibly imagine -- but it would nearly cost him his life.

Semyon Dukach was known as the Darling of Las Vegas. A legend at age twenty-one, this cocky hotshot was the biggest high roller to appear in Sin City in decades, a mathematical genius with a system the casinos had never seen before and couldn't stop -- a system that has never been revealed until now; that has nothing to do with card counting, wasn't illegal, and was more powerful than anything that had been tried before.

Las Vegas. Atlantic City. Aruba. Barcelona. London. And the jewel of the gambling crown -- Monte Carlo.

Dukach and his fellow MIT students hit them all and made millions. They came in hard, with stacks of cash; big, seemingly insane bets; women hanging on their arms; and fake identities. Although they were taking classes and studying for exams during the week, over the weekends they stormed the blackjack tables only to be harassed, banned from casinos, threatened at gunpoint, and beaten in Vegas's notorious back rooms.

The stakes were high, the dangers very real, but the players were up to the challenges, consequences be damned. There was Semyon Dukach himself, bored with school and broke; Victor Cassius, the slick, brilliant MIT grad student who galvanized the team; Owen Keller, with stunning ability but a dark past that would catch up to him; and Allie Simpson, bright, clever, and a feast for the eyes.

In the classroom, they were geeks. On the casino floor, they were unstoppable.

Busting Vega$ is Dukach's unbelievably true story; a riveting account of monumental greed, excess, hubris, sex, love, violence, fear, and statistics that is high-stakes entertainment at its best.




Customer Reviews:   Read 51 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars AMAZING BOOK   October 24, 2008
This book was amazing, Ben writes some gripping and rather amzing stories considering they are nonfiction!


2 out of 5 stars entertaining, but there are better novels   August 19, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This book is pretty much an advertisement for one of the subject's seminars. So many things in this are clearly fabricated. If a casino sees you make hugely varying bets and coming out ahead, they will ask you to leave, ban you from the casino, then share your picture with the other casinos. It's actually fairly easy to beat blackjack, but it's hard to do it without the casino.


5 out of 5 stars A True Page Turner   August 19, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

For the longest time, I thought Busting Vegas and Bringing Down the House were the same book with different titles. After not being thrilled with Mezrich's RIGGED, I ran into Busting Vegas at a nearby bookstore and realized that indeed it was a completely different book than BDTH.

I thoroughly enjoyed this very entertaining account of a completely different formula to "Beat the House" than card counting. If you have read Mezrich's other works and enjoyed them, as well as enjoy the game of blackjack, I think you cannot go wrong with this one. The characters are vivid and the story telling is rich and vivid with detail.



1 out of 5 stars easy-to-read trashy fiction with ridiculous self-justification squeezed in   August 8, 2008
 2 out of 2 found this review helpful

if this book were simply an exciting fast-paced story (albeit poorly written), i would rate it 2 stars

unfortunately, about halfway through it goes moralistic with dripping hypocrisy - an unnecessary element i found annoying. an example from page 151:

"'okay,' victor said as he surveyed the group, lined up on the balcony, blue water behind them, the glass casino glowing on the horizon. 'let's show this little island what a bit of math, in the right hands, can do to balance out a few hundred years of economic oppression, shall we?'

semyon grinned, and barely felt the pinch of his still bruised lower lip. robin hood had nothing on them"

just like robin hood - except they keep the money for themselves (MIT/harvard students)

the 'afterword' takes the ridiculous moral justification a few steps further. an example from page 283/4:

"for me and my teammates, beating the casinos has never been entirely about the money. of course the money was important, and on the surface, the whole enterprise may have even resembled a kind of crazy financial start-up on steroids, but anyone looking deeper would have seen that for us, the blackjack team was not a business, but a passionate, desperate struggle against the mighty evil empire that was and continues to be the casino industry... inspired by the success of open source, i've come to believe that to really make a substantial impact against a powerful adversary like the casino industry, you have to sacrifice the short term profits of a select few in order to enable the masses to cooperate and innovate... once this book is published, millions of people will get exposure to some of our key methods"

uhhh.. what?!!!! the book is glammed to the max with regard to gambling (the cover is no anomaly) and somehow it's still a "desperate struggle against the mighty evil empire"? comparing casino cheating to a productive venture - like a startup or successful open source teams - is ridiculous

with a world of other books to read, i do not recommend this one



5 out of 5 stars Smart and rich   March 9, 2008
A great tale compellingly told. Would have been nice to have had some of the math exposed in an appendix for those who care, but a grand story

Shopping Cart
Secure Shopping Refunds Where's My Stuff? Super Saver Shipping
Privacy Policy Returns Policy Shipping Rates & Policies Order Tracking
Vegas Activities Madame Tussaud's Wax Museum Grand Canyon Experience Vegas Wedding Package
Tickets: KA by Cirque du Soleil Tickets: LOVE Tickets: ZUMANITY Contact Us