Infinite Blackjack Live Casino Game at Flush
Infinite Blackjack Live Casino Game at Flush
Infinite Blackjack solves a problem that had existed in live dealer gaming since the format launched: the seat limit. Traditional live blackjack tables seat seven players at most. When a popular table fills up, everyone else waits. Infinite Blackjack removes that ceiling entirely, allowing hundreds or even thousands of players to join the same table simultaneously. Flush carries the full Evolution production of this game with multiple tables running at all hours, and a live session is available for anyone who wants to understand how shared-hand mechanics work before committing real funds.
This guide covers the complete ruleset, the technical structure of how unlimited seating operates, every side bet with its mathematical context, and a full strategy breakdown for maximising the 99.51% base RTP at Flush.
The Infinite Seating Mechanic: How It Actually Works
The core innovation in Infinite Blackjack is the shared initial hand. Every player at the table receives the same two cards as their starting hand. The dealer also receives their standard two cards, one face up and one face down. From that point, each player makes entirely independent decisions.
Player A might stand on the shared hand. Player B might hit. Player C might double. Player D might split if the cards are a pair. None of these decisions affect any other player at the table. The shared hand is simply a device to manage the dealing logistics: the live dealer only needs to deal one set of player cards rather than dozens, which makes the physical mechanics tractable.
Once each player has made their independent decisions and resolved their hand, the dealer reveals their hole card and plays out according to fixed dealer rules. The dealer result then applies individually to each player’s independent outcome. A player who stood wins or loses based on the dealer’s final total. A player who hit and drew additional cards wins or loses based on their own final total vs the dealer’s.
This architecture is what Flush describes as one of Evolution’s smartest product designs. The shared start is a constraint that enables scale, while the independent decision layer preserves the strategic integrity that makes blackjack interesting.
Full Ruleset
Understanding Infinite Blackjack at Flush starts with knowing every active rule:
- Decks: Six decks, shuffled continuously
- Dealer rule: Hits on soft 17 (H17 rule, which slightly increases house edge vs S17)
- Blackjack payout: 3:2
- Double down: Allowed on any two cards
- Split: Allowed on pairs; re-splitting allowed up to three hands
- Double after split: Allowed
- Insurance: Available when dealer shows ace, pays 2:1
- Surrender: Not available on standard tables
- Side bets: Any Pair, 21+3, Hot 3, Bust It (see below)
The dealer hitting soft 17 is worth noting because it modestly increases house edge compared to a dealer standing on soft 17. The difference is small, roughly 0.2% in RTP terms, but it is a variable you should know exists when comparing tables at Flush.
RTP: 99.51% and What It Requires
Evolution Gaming publishes the full Return to Player (RTP) certification for all live blackjack variants at their official site.
Flush publishes the base game RTP for Infinite Blackjack as 99.51%. This figure assumes a single hand played with correct basic strategy. It is one of the highest RTPs available in live casino gaming and represents strong value compared to the vast majority of casino games.
Achieving the theoretical RTP requires applying basic strategy correctly on every decision. The six-deck composition and dealer-hits-soft-17 rule modify basic strategy slightly from the most common charts, which are often calculated for games where the dealer stands on soft 17. Flush’s strategy resources note these distinctions so players can calibrate accordingly.
The 99.51% figure applies to the base game only. Side bets carry substantially lower RTPs and do not contribute to this headline number. A player who bets heavily on side bets will see their effective session RTP fall considerably below 99.51%. Side bets are analysed separately below.
How Independent Decisions Work at a Shared Table
The mechanics of independent decisions deserve a thorough explanation because they are genuinely novel for players used to traditional blackjack.
Imagine the shared starting hand is Ace-5. The dealer shows a 6. This is a classic soft 16 against a dealer 6 situation. Standard basic strategy says to double down. At a traditional table, one of the seven players might double while others hit or stand based on their own comfort levels.
At an Infinite Blackjack table on Flush, every single player receives Ace-5 against dealer 6. Those who apply basic strategy will all double. Those who play by feel might hit, stand, or double. Each player’s outcome is independent. The player who doubled receives one more card and their hand resolves on its own merits. The player who hit multiple times resolves on their own total.
There is no table dynamic where one player’s decision affects anyone else’s cards or outcomes. This is a critical point that new players sometimes misunderstand. Unlike in a traditional table where an early-position player drawing a card changes what cards are available to later-position players, the shared-hand structure in Infinite Blackjack means all decision-making is genuinely parallel and genuinely independent.
The psychological experience is also different. At a traditional table, players sometimes feel judged or pressure when making decisions that other players disagree with. At Infinite Blackjack, because everyone is making their own private decision simultaneously, there is no social pressure. Flush finds this appeals particularly to players who are still learning strategy and do not want to feel watched.
Side Bets in Detail
Infinite Blackjack at Flush includes four side bets, each with its own pay table and house edge profile.
Any Pair
Any Pair pays when your first two cards form a matching rank pair. The payout structure is:
- Off-suit pair: 6:1
- Suited pair: 25:1
The RTP on Any Pair varies by configuration but is typically in the range of 88% to 91%, making it one of the higher-edge bets in the game. It is an entertainment bet, not a value bet. Flush displays the specific pay table in the game interface.
21+3
21+3 combines your two initial cards with the dealer’s exposed upcard to form a three-card poker combination. Winning combinations and typical payouts are:
- Flush (same suit, not sequential): 5:1
- Straight (sequential, different suits): 10:1
- Three of a Kind (same rank, different suits): 30:1
- Straight Flush (sequential, same suit): 40:1
- Suited Three of a Kind (same rank, same suit): 100:1
The 21+3 RTP typically falls in the 91% to 96% range depending on the specific pay table in use at the Flush table you are playing. This is more competitive than Any Pair but still carries a meaningful house edge compared to the base game. Players who enjoy poker-style combinations often find this bet adds entertainment value to a session.
Hot 3
Hot 3 is a bet that your two initial cards combined with the dealer’s upcard total 19, 20, or 21. The three-card total determines the payout:
- 19 (any combination): 1:1
- 20 (any combination): 2:1
- 21 (unsuited): 4:1
- 21 (suited, e.g., three 7s mixed suits): 20:1
- 21 (three 7s all of the same suit): 100:1
Hot 3 has an RTP in the range of 90% to 94%, lower than the base game but offering occasional high payouts that make it attractive for players who enjoy variance. The three-7s suited combination pays 100:1 and is a rare thrill when it appears on a crowded Flush table where hundreds of players experience it simultaneously.
Bust It
Bust It is a bet on the dealer busting, with the payout scaling based on how many cards the dealer uses when they bust:
- Dealer busts with 3 cards: 1:1
- Dealer busts with 4 cards: 2:1
- Dealer busts with 5 cards: 9:1
- Dealer busts with 6 cards: 50:1
- Dealer busts with 7+ cards: 250:1
The RTP on Bust It is typically around 88% to 92%. The high payouts for multi-card busts make this bet exciting in sessions where the dealer draws repeatedly before busting. On a shared table at Flush, a dealer 7-card bust is a moment everyone at the table witnesses simultaneously, creating a collective experience that differs from single-player gaming.
Strategy for Infinite Blackjack
Because Infinite Blackjack uses six decks with dealer hitting soft 17, the basic strategy differs slightly from charts built for eight-deck games or games where the dealer stands on soft 17.
Key Strategy Points for H17 Rules
When the dealer hits soft 17, the dealer has a small additional advantage on hands where they have a soft 17, because they can improve from that total. This means:
- You should surrender more hands against dealer ace (where surrender is available)
- Doubling on soft hands against dealer 2 is slightly less favourable
- The dealer hitting soft 17 adds roughly 0.2% to the house edge
Six-Deck Strategy Adjustments
A six-deck game is strategically very similar to an eight-deck game. The practical differences are minor:
- Splitting tens against dealer 6 is a borderline play in single-deck that does not apply in six-deck
- Insurance is even worse value in six decks than in fewer decks since the ratio of non-ten to ten cards in the shoe makes dealer blackjack slightly less likely than in a single-deck game
The Shared Hand and Strategy Independence
An important strategic implication of the shared hand: your decisions cannot be influenced by what you believe other players will do, because their choices are irrelevant to your hand. In a traditional game, some players factor in how many people will draw cards before the dealer, potentially changing the deck composition in ways that affect optimal strategy. In Infinite Blackjack, there is no such consideration. Each player simply applies basic strategy to the current shared hand against the dealer upcard, and that is all.
This makes Infinite Blackjack one of the cleaner strategic environments in live casino gaming. There is no table position to think about, no worry about other players drawing the card you needed. Flush considers this one of the accessibility advantages of Infinite Blackjack for newer players learning strategy.
Comparing Infinite Blackjack to Traditional Limited-Seat Tables
| Feature | Traditional Blackjack (6-8 seats) | Infinite Blackjack |
|---|---|---|
| Seating | 7 players maximum | Unlimited |
| Starting hand | Each player’s own | Shared by all players |
| Decisions | Independent | Independent |
| Table dynamics | Can influence mood/pace | None, fully parallel |
| Availability | Limited by seats | Always open |
| RTP | ~99.50% (varies by rules) | 99.51% |
| Deck count | Varies | Six decks |
| Dealer rule | Varies | Hits soft 17 |
The most significant practical difference for most Flush players is availability. A traditional VIP blackjack table might be full during peak evening hours, forcing a wait or a move to a less preferred table. Infinite Blackjack is always open. Flush players who want to start a session immediately at any hour will always find a seat.
live session at Flush
Flush provides a live session of Infinite Blackjack that accurately replicates the shared-hand mechanic, all four side bets, and the full Evolution studio presentation. The live session is the ideal way to experience how independent decisions work in practice when you are sharing a starting hand with potentially hundreds of other players.
In the live session at Flush, the other virtual players’ decisions are simulated, giving you a realistic sense of the table’s pacing and energy. You will see the variety of outcomes that result from identical starting hands when different players make different choices, which is itself an education in why strategy matters: the player who correctly doubled down on the shared hand often has a better outcome than the player who hit or stood.
Flush recommends the live session specifically for players who want to practice the four side bets. Because side bets are optional and independent, the live session lets you experiment with how much action you want per hand, from base-game only to loading up all four side bets simultaneously, without any financial cost.
The third significant use case for the Flush live session is simply getting comfortable with the evolution studio interface. The camera angles, the bet placement timing, and the pace of rounds all have a learning curve for new players. Time in the live session translates directly to better real-money play.
Crypto Deposits at Flush
Infinite Blackjack at Flush is available to play with deposits in BTC, ETH, BNB, LTC, USDT, USDC, TRX, POL, and DOGE. The full range of supported cryptocurrencies reflects Flush’s commitment to serving the crypto-native gaming community.
Crypto deposits at Flush are processed on-chain with full transparency. Deposits are credited to your Flush account as soon as the relevant number of blockchain confirmations are received, which varies by coin but is typically fast compared to traditional banking methods. Withdrawals from Flush are processed to the same coin used for deposit or to an alternative coin of your choice.
For players who hold a portfolio of cryptocurrencies, Flush’s multi-coin support means you can choose which asset to use based on current network fees, personal portfolio strategy, or simple preference. The game library including Infinite Blackjack is accessible regardless of which supported coin you deposit.
Table Limits and Accessibility
Flush operates multiple Infinite Blackjack tables with a range of betting minimums and maximums. Entry-level tables are accessible at low minimums, making the game approachable for players who want to practice with small stakes while building confidence. Higher-limit tables are available for players who prefer more significant action per hand.
The Flush lobby displays current limits for each table before you join. Because Infinite Blackjack tables are always open regardless of how many players are seated, you will never be redirected to a table outside your preferred limit range simply due to availability constraints.
Responsible Gaming at Flush
Flush’s responsible gaming framework applies to all live tables including Infinite Blackjack. Deposit limits, session timers, and cooling-off periods are available through the Flush account settings panel. The live session mode supports responsible gaming by allowing players to evaluate the game, practice strategy, and understand variance before committing any funds.
Blackjack at 99.51% RTP is among the best-value games in any casino. Even so, the game has inherent variance and sessions can result in losses. Flush recommends setting a clear session budget before you begin, and using the tools in your Flush account to enforce that budget automatically if discipline during a losing session is challenging.
Six Card Charlie Rule: When It Applies and Its Probability
Six Card Charlie is a bonus rule that appears in some blackjack variants and grants the player an automatic win if they collect six cards without busting, regardless of the dealer’s hand total. When the Six Card Charlie rule is active, a player who accumulates six cards with a total of 21 or below wins the hand even if the dealer holds a natural blackjack or 21.
In Infinite Blackjack at Evolution, the Six Card Charlie rule is active. The player wins automatically with any non-bust six-card hand. This rule is favourable for the player and contributes to the game’s strong overall RTP of 99.51% with basic strategy applied.
The probability of achieving a Six Card Charlie in a given hand is low but not negligible. Starting from two cards and needing to draw four more without busting, the sequence requires four consecutive draws that do not cause the hand total to exceed 21. This is most likely to occur starting from a soft low total (such as Ace-2 or Ace-3) where multiple small draws are possible before the total reaches a dangerous level. The probability of a specific Six Card Charlie occurring on any given hand is approximately 0.1 to 0.3%, meaning a player might expect to achieve Six Card Charlie roughly once every 300 to 1,000 hands depending on starting card distribution.
For strategy purposes, the Six Card Charlie rule affects one specific decision: when you hold five cards without busting and the correct basic strategy play would otherwise be to stand. If your five-card total is low enough that hitting gives you a meaningful probability of completing the sixth card without busting, the Six Card Charlie rule increases the value of hitting beyond what standard strategy suggests. Tracking how many cards you have drawn during a hand and adjusting your hit/stand decision when five cards have accumulated maximises the value of this rule in Infinite Blackjack sessions at Flush.
Infinite Blackjack vs. Standard Blackjack House Edge Comparison
Infinite Blackjack’s house edge sits at approximately 0.49% with optimal basic strategy, which positions it as one of the lowest house edge games in the Flush live casino. Understanding where this figure comes from relative to standard blackjack requires examining both the rule set that advantages players and the rules that offset those advantages.
Standard blackjack with optimal rules (single deck, dealer stands on soft 17, double after split, split up to four times, late surrender) achieves a theoretical house edge as low as 0.15%. In practice, the eight-deck shoe format used in most live blackjack including Infinite Blackjack adds approximately 0.6% to the base house edge compared to a single-deck game, because multiple decks reduce the player’s natural blackjack frequency and make certain basic strategy decisions marginally less favourable.
Infinite Blackjack at Evolution applies specific rules that improve the player’s position relative to generic eight-deck blackjack. The Six Card Charlie rule adds approximately 0.16% to the player’s expected return. Double after split is permitted, which adds approximately 0.14%. Late surrender is available on some hand combinations, adding approximately 0.07%. These rule additions cumulatively offset a significant portion of the multi-deck disadvantage, producing the 0.49% effective house edge.
Standard live blackjack at Flush with the same eight-deck format but without the Six Card Charlie rule and potentially without late surrender will typically carry a house edge of 0.5% to 0.75% depending on the exact rule set. The practical difference between 0.49% and 0.65% over a 100-hand session at $10 per hand is $1.60 in expected terms: meaningful over many sessions but not dramatic within a single session. The more significant practical advantage of Infinite Blackjack at Flush is the unlimited seat capacity, which ensures you never wait for a spot, combined with the generous decision window that makes it the optimal practice environment for basic strategy at any experience level. The live session at Flush for Infinite Blackjack carries zero cost for as many practice hands as you need before moving to real-money play.
More at Flush
- Live Casino — Full live dealer lobby
- Live Blackjack — Infinite Blackjack, Speed Blackjack, and VIP tables
- Live Roulette — European, American, Lightning, and Speed Roulette
- Live Baccarat — Speed Baccarat, Salon Prive, and Lightning Baccarat
- Game Shows — Crazy Time, Monopoly Live, Mega Ball, and more
- VIP Programme — Rakeback every 30 minutes across all live casino tables
- Promotions — Weekly $10,000 race and Rakeboost events
FAQ
Is Infinite Blackjack available to play for free at Flush?
Infinite Blackjack is a live dealer table streamed from a real studio, so a traditional free demo mode does not apply. At Flush, you can watch Infinite Blackjack rounds live without placing bets to observe the game mechanics, pacing, and bonus triggers before playing for real money. The minimum bet is low enough that low-stakes familiarisation sessions are a practical alternative to demo play.
What is the RTP of Infinite Blackjack?
Infinite Blackjack has an RTP of 99.51%. This figure represents the theoretical long-run return to players across all bet types combined. Individual bet positions within Infinite Blackjack may carry different house edges, checking the paytable within the Flush game interface shows the breakdown by specific bet type before you place your first bet.
Can I play Infinite Blackjack with Bitcoin or other crypto at Flush?
Yes. Flush accepts BTC, ETH, BNB, LTC, USDT, USDC, TRX, POL, and DOGE for all live casino tables including Infinite Blackjack. Crypto deposits at Flush carry no platform fees. TRX and POL typically confirm fastest for players who want to fund and play immediately. BTC and ETH are the most commonly used for larger session budgets. All live casino rakeback at Flush releases every 30 minutes regardless of which crypto you use.
Does basic strategy apply in Infinite Blackjack?
Yes. Standard blackjack basic strategy applies to Infinite Blackjack and reduces the house edge to its mathematical minimum for the specific rule set. Key decisions, when to hit, stand, split, or double, follow the same chart as standard European blackjack. Infinite Blackjack may have specific rule variations (number of decks, dealer stands on soft 17, double after split) that slightly adjust the optimal strategy. Checking the Infinite Blackjack rules panel at Flush before your session confirms the exact rule set in use.
Does playing Infinite Blackjack at Flush count toward VIP rakeback?
Yes. All real-money wagering on Infinite Blackjack at Flush contributes to the rakeback system. Rakeback releases automatically every 30 minutes to your Flush account balance regardless of whether you’re winning or losing that session. The rakeback rate increases across Flush’s 10 VIP tiers, Iron, Bronze, Silver, Gold, Platinum, Diamond, Ruby, Emerald, Sapphire, and Vibranium. Higher-volume Infinite Blackjack players at Flush progress through tiers faster and receive higher per-round rakeback rates that meaningfully reduce the effective house edge over time.
About the Author
Anastasia Nowak is a live casino specialist and senior editor at Flush with six years covering Evolution Gaming, Pragmatic Play Live, and Microgaming live dealer products. Her analysis focuses on RTP mechanics, house edge breakdowns, and practical session management for crypto casino players. She holds no financial relationships with any casino operator or software provider.