Ken Uston

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Ken Uston
Ken Uston

Ken Uston (January 12, 1935September 19, 1987) was a famous blackjack player, strategist, and author. During the early to mid 1970s he gained widespread notoriety for his successful implementation and moreover the perfecting of both individual and team card counting techniques, strategies, and disguises at the blackjack tables of numerous casinos worldwide. In the early 1980s, he authored several popular books on video games and personal computers.

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[edit] History

Ken Uston -- the oldest of three children -- was born Kenneth Senzo Usui in New York City to Elsie Lubitz, a native of Austria, and Senzo Usui, a Japanese immigrant and businessman [1]. At the age of 16 years, Uston was accepted to and henceforth began attending Yale University. Shortly after graduating from Yale, he went on to earn an MBA from Harvard University; subsequent to this latter achievement, he relocated to San Francisco, California, quickly climbing the corporate ladder to become the youngest Senior Vice-President in the history of the Pacific Stock Exchange.[citation needed]

[edit] Blackjack

In a Blackjack Forum interview,[2] Uston related that he became fascinated by blackjack and its inherent strategies after meeting professional gambler Al Francesco in a poker game. Francesco had recently launched the first "big player" type of blackjack card counting team, and he recruited Uston to be one of his main team players.

Although Al Francesco and other team members have recounted in subsequent Blackjack Forum interviews that Uston made very little money for their team, Uston co-authored with Roger Rapoport a book entitled The Big Player in which he shared credit for many of his card-counting successes with his fellow team members, including noted Blackjack master-strategist Bill Erb. Soon after the publication of Uston's book, it is reported that Al Francesco's team found itself effectively barred from playing in Las Vegas.

In 1976, the year gambling was legalized in Atlantic City, New Jersey, Uston moved to the area and formed a profitable blackjack team of his own (discussed at length in a 2005 Blackjack Forum interview with team member Darryl Purpose). As with most other casinos around the globe, Uston was soon barred from playing at those locations within Atlantic City as well. In the state of New Jersey he filed suit against Resorts International, claiming that casinos did not have the right to bar skilled players. In Uston v. Resorts International Hotel Inc., 445 A.2d 370 (N.J. 1982), the New Jersey State Supreme Court ruled that Atlantic City casinos did not have the authority to decide whether skilled players could be barred. To date, Atlantic City casinos -- by statute -- are not allowed to bar card counters. Many skilled blackjack players argue that Uston's legal victory actually worsened blackjack in Atlantic City because casinos responded to the court ruling by adding decks, moving up the shuffle point, and taking other measures to decrease the skilled player's potential advantage.[citation needed]

After his numerous casino barrings -- now on his own and without a team -- Uston adopted a wide variety of disguises in order to continue to play blackjack. He was also known for his aggressive approach along with his flamboyant playing style. In an article in Blackjack Forum, Arnold Snyder describes playing with Ken Uston at Circus Circus in Las Vegas near the end of Uston's life. He states that Uston was disguised as a worker from Hoover Dam and got away with spreading his bets from table minimum to table maximum on a single-deck game. Since this took place at a time when card counting was well understood by casino executives and managers, and since the primary clue by which casinos detect card counting is a card counter's "bet spread" pattern, most card counters would also consider Uston a genius of disguise, and/or "card counting camouflage".

After The Big Player, Uston went on to write Million Dollar Blackjack. This book includes details about professional gamblers' techniques for gaining an advantage at the game. Uston also authored a companion piece, Ken Uston On Blackjack.

[edit] Video games and computers

In an interview published in Video Games, [3] Uston revealed he got hooked on PONG and then Breakout. In 1979 Space Invaders became his video game of choice and, after his blackjack team made $350,000 in Atlantic City, they rented a house in California and bought a Space Invaders machine. The game appealed to him in part because of the trick of counting one's shots to get the maximum number of points for the spaceship at the top of the screen.

In 1981, Uston began frequenting the Easy Street Pub near the Playboy Casino in Atlantic City. It was there he began a competition with some other regulars for having the high score on the bar's Pac-Man arcade game. He realized the game had patterns and, in order to gain an advantage, he began experimenting and writing them down on diagrams of the maze he had created, but he was unable to go beyond a certain level. On a trip back to San Francisco, he came across two Chinese boys named Tommy and Raymond who taught him how to get further in the game. People had been telling Uston he should write a book about Pac-Man, but he had felt he didn't have enough knowledge. After receiving lessons from the two boys, Uston decided to go ahead with the book, titled Mastering PAC-MAN, and wrote it in four days.[3] It went on to appear in the New York Times Best Seller list. [3] [4]

Uston went on to write several more books about video games and home computers during the 1980s (see bibliography below). He also licensed his name to Coleco for the ColecoVision game, Ken Uston's Blackjack/Poker. Around 1983, Screenplay published software titled Ken Uston's Profe$$ional Blackjack for the Apple II series, Atari 8-bit family, Commodore 64, and IBM PC to help learn and practice Uston's card-counting techniques.

He was also credited with the idea for the 1984 game Puzzle Panic.

[edit] Death

On the morning of September 19, 1987, Ken Uston, age 52, was found dead in his rented apartment in Paris, France. His official cause of death was listed as heart failure.[5]

[edit] Bibliography

This bibliography is thus far incomplete.

[edit] Blackjack

[edit] Video games

[edit] Computers

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Uston, Kathleen. "Bio", Uston.com, accessed November 20, 2006.
  2. ^ Blackjack Forum interview
  3. ^ a b c Dionne, Roger. "Video Games Interview: Ken Uston", Video Games, vol. 1, no. 3, December 1982.
  4. ^ "Pac-Man Fever", Time, April 5, 1982 [1]
  5. ^ Obituary from Blackjack Forum Magazine -- 1 December 1987

[edit] External links

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