Card shoe apparatus and table game system

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 10124242
  • Patent Number
    10,124,242
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, August 22, 2013
    11 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 13, 2018
    6 years ago
Abstract
A card shoe apparatus includes a card reading unit for reading from a card a code when the card is drawn from the card housing unit, and a control unit that determines the winner/loser of a card game based on the number of the cards sequentially read by the card reading unit. The control unit further includes a memory that stores information on a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit, and has a function of detecting an irregularity of a shuffled playing card set.
Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a National Phase application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of PCT Application PCT/JP2013/004956, filed Aug. 22, 2013, which claims priority benefit to PCT Application PCT/JP2012/006230, filed Sep. 28, 2012, and Japanese Application Serial No. 2012-227444, filed Sep. 25, 2012, which are all hereby incorporated by reference.


TECHNICAL FIELD

The present invention relates to a card shoe apparatus and a table game system with a function of preventing cheating in a card game played with playing cards (hereinafter simply referred to as “cards”) such as baccarat.


BACKGROUND ART

In poker, baccarat, bridge, blackjack, and other card games, a dealer sets one or more decks of playing cards in a card shoe or the like, and deals cards to game players by drawing out the cards one by one out of the card shoe or the like. In doing so, to ensure fairness in the games, the cards need to be dealt at random. Therefore, a game host has to sufficiently shuffle the playing cards randomly in order to ensure a random order of arrangement of the playing cards before they are set in the card shoe.


A conventional card shuffling device for shuffling cards is disclosed in, for example, Patent Literature 1.


The shuffled playing cards used in various card games such as poker, baccarat, bridge or blackjack include, ordinarily, 416 cards if eight decks of cards are used, and we cannot completely eliminate the possibility of the occurrence of a state in which such shuffled playing cards are arranged not in a random order but in a specific order instead (for example, a state of ten consecutive Ace cards) for some reason. If a set of cards that has not been sufficiently shuffled to be arranged in a random order is set in a card shoe or the like and used in a game, the fairness of the game may not be secured, which is a problem. In a card game, the arrangement order of the cards that are drawn during the game is important; the cards are drawn in such an order and the winner/loser of the game is also decided by the arrangement order.


CITATION LIST

Patent Literature 1: WO 2009/069708


The present invention has been made in view of the above problems, and aims to provide a card shoe and a table game system capable of detecting a state in which the shuffled playing cards to be used in a card game are not randomly arranged when the card shoe deals the cards onto the game table, thereby preventing the condition of an unfair game, and the dealing of cards of a card set arranged in a specific order, which thus, should not be dealt onto the game table, as well as a method therefor.


Solution to Problem

One aspect of the present invention is a card shoe apparatus, and a card shoe apparatus for storing shuffled playing cards on a game table and manually dealing the cards housed in the card shoe apparatus one by one onto the game table, the card shoe apparatus comprising:


a card housing unit for housing the shuffled playing cards;


an opening unit for drawing out the cards from the card housing unit one by one;


a card reading unit that reads, from a card, information provided in the card drawn from the card housing unit onto the game table;


a control unit that stores rules of a card game, and determines the winner/loser of the card game according to said rules, based on the information of the cards read by the card reading unit; and


an output unit that outputs a result of the winner/loser determined by the control unit,


wherein the control unit has a shuffling checking function of storing the information of the cards read by the card reading unit for a predetermined number of cards, detecting and outputting an irregularity of the shuffled playing cards housed in the card housing unit based on the information of the cards read by the card reading unit, and outputting an irregularity alarm,


the irregularity of the shuffled playing cards being at least one of the following cases:

    • (1) a case where a state in which the rank of a card is larger or smaller by one than the card preceding that card continues for a predetermined number of cards;
    • (2) a case where cards with the same rank continue for a predetermined number of cards;
    • (3) a case where the same sequence is repeated throughout a predetermined number of cards;
    • (4) a case where cards with the same suit continue for at least a predetermined number of cards;
    • (5) a case where the arrangement order of a predetermined number of cards matches an arrangement order registered in advance;
    • (6) a case where a state in which a card drawn has the same suit and rank as the card that precedes the card drawn by 52 cards continues for a plurality of cards; and
    • (7) a case that corresponds to a case that has been registered in advance as an irregular case.
    • (8) a case where cards with the same rank and suit are drawn for at least a predetermined number of cards.


As explained hereinafter, there are other aspects in the present invention. Accordingly, this disclosure of the invention is intended to provide some aspects of the present invention, and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention described and claimed herein.





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS


FIG. 1 is a perspective view schematically showing the entirety of a table game system according to an embodiment of the present invention.



FIG. 2 is a perspective view of shuffled playing cards to be used in the table game system according to the embodiment.



FIG. 3 is a plan view of a card according to the embodiment of the present invention.



FIG. 4 is a diagram showing a general configuration of the card shoe apparatus.



FIG. 5(a) is a plan view showing an example of an irregularity in the arrangement order of cards detected by the card shoe apparatus, and FIG. 5(b) is a plan view showing another example of an irregularity in the arrangement order of cards.



FIG. 6 is a plan view of a card guide of the card shoe apparatus in which main portions are enlarged and the card guide is partially broken.



FIG. 7 is a diagram showing the relation between output waves from sensors and marks in the card shoe apparatus.



FIG. 8 is a diagram showing a general configuration of the card shoe apparatus.


Each of FIGS. 9(a) and 9(b) is a diagram showing a embodiment of the card movement restriction means.





DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENT

Detailed explanation of the present invention will be mentioned hereinafter. However, the following detailed explanation and accompanying drawings do not limit the invention.


To solve the above conventional problems, the present invention provides a table game system including:


shuffled playing cards made up of a predetermined number of cards, the cards having been shuffled in advance, each card with information representing a rank thereof as a code that is normally invisible; and,


a card shoe apparatus for storing the shuffled playing cards on a game table and manually dealing the cards housed in the card shoe apparatus one by one onto the game table,


wherein the card shoe apparatus includes:


a card housing unit for housing the shuffled playing cards;


an opening unit for drawing out the cards from the card housing unit one by one


a card reading unit that reads the code provided in the card drawn from the card housing unit onto the game table,


a control unit that stores rules of a card game, and determines the winner/loser of the card game according to said rules, based on the information of the cards read by the card reading unit; and


a output unit that outputs a result of the winner/loser determined by the control unit, and


the control unit has a shuffling checking function of storing the information of the cards read by the card reading unit for a predetermined number of cards, detecting and outputting an irregularity of the shuffled playing cards housed in the card housing unit based on the information of the cards read by the card reading unit,


the irregularity of the shuffled playing cards being at least one of the following cases:


(1) a case where a state in which the rank of a card is larger (or smaller) by one than the card preceding that card continues for a predetermined number of cards (for example, 1, 2, 3, 4, ---, K);


(2) a case where cards with the same rank continue for a predetermined number of cards (for example, A, A, A, A, ---);


(3) a case where the same sequence is repeated throughout a predetermined number of cards (for example, A, Q, 10, A, Q, 10, ---);


(4) a case where cards with the same suit continue for at least a predetermined number of cards (for example, 13 consecutive cards with Hearts);


(5) a case where the arrangement order of a predetermined number of cards matches an arrangement order registered in advance;


(6) a case where a state in which a card drawn has the same suit and rank as the card that precedes the card drawn by 52 cards continues for a plurality of cards; and


(7) a case that corresponds to a case that has been registered in advance as an irregular case.


(8) a case where cards with the same rank and suit are drawn for at least a predetermined number of cards.


With the present invention, it is possible to provide a table game system capable of detecting a state in which the shuffled playing cards to be used in a card game are not randomly arranged when a card shoe deals the cards onto a game table, thereby preventing the condition of an unfair game, and the dealing of a predetermined number or more of cards of a card set arranged in a specific order, which thus, should not be dealt.


Description of Embodiments

An embodiment of a table game system of the present invention will be described below. FIG. 1 is a perspective view schematically showing the entirety of a table game system according to the present embodiment. FIG. 2 is a perspective view of shuffled playing cards to be used in the table game system of the present embodiment. A shuffled playing card set 1s used in the table game system of the present embodiment is provided in a state in which cards 1 made up of a predetermined number of decks (normally, 6, 8 or 10 decks) have been shuffled and randomly arranged. On the game table, the shuffled playing card set 1s is housed in a card shoe apparatus 2 bundled with a band (B), and thereafter, the band (B) is undone and removed such that the cards 1 of the shuffled playing cards 1s can be dealt one by one. During a game, a dealer deals the cards 1 onto the game table out of the card shoe apparatus 2.


A cut card 1c is inserted in the shuffled playing card set 1s before it is set in the card shoe apparatus 2. The cut card 1c is inserted at any place within the latter half portion of the shuffled playing card set 1s when used in a game (in the last quarter or one-fifth of the shuffled playing card set 1s). The cut card 1c is used to end a game at the game table leaving about 20 to 40 cards 1 in the card shoe apparatus 2, so as to prevent any player from counting the ranks of the cards 1 dealt during a game to predict the ranks of the cards when the number of the cards that have not been dealt yet becomes small. FIG. 3 shows the cards 1 which form the shuffled playing cards. A figure is encoded and printed in UV ink or the like, which is invisible under normal conditions, on each card 1 that is used in table games such as baccarat. In FIG. 3, codes 3, each of which is configured with marks M, are provided in the upper and lower sides of the card 1 in a point-symmetric manner.


In FIG. 4, the card shoe apparatus 2 of the table game system of the present embodiment includes a card guide unit 7 that guides the cards 1 that are drawn one by one out of a card housing unit 5 onto a game table 6, and a card reading unit 8 that reads from a card 1, when the card 1 is drawn from the card housing unit 5, the code 3 that indicates the figure (number, rank) of that card 1. The card shoe apparatus 2 further includes a control unit 12 that stores the rules of a card game for determining the winner/loser of the card game (in this example, the baccarat game), and determines the winner/loser based on the numbers (ranks) of the cards 1 read by the card reading unit 8. The control unit 12 stores the rules of a card game in a memory 13 to be described below, and determines the winner/loser between the player and the banker based on the total of the numbers (ranks) of their hands, each hand consisting of several cards 1 that were dealt. An output means 11 (configured from a plurality of lamps) displays the result of this determination.


The control unit 12 includes the memory 13 that stores the information of a predetermined number of cards 1 read by the card reading unit 8, with which the control unit 12 stores the arrangement order of the cards of the shuffled playing cards 1s, and has a function of detecting any irregularity described below. Upon the detection of an irregularity in the arrangement order of the cards of the shuffled playing cards 1s housed in the card housing unit 5, the management division or the pit of the casino is notified thereof by an arrangement order irregularity alarm through an external output means 100. In addition, arrangement order irregularity lamps 101 and a liquid crystal display unit 102 exhibit the irregularity in the cards 1, thereby informing a dealer or the like thereof. A wired or wireless communication means is used as a means of outputting the irregularity alarm.


Note that the irregularity alarm is given by a two-phase alarm system. In the first phase, an alarm is displayed in the liquid crystal display unit 102, which is a side display of the card shoe apparatus 2, upon the detection of an irregularity such that only the dealer who has the role of dealing the cards can know the irregularity. Next, in the second phase, the irregularity alarm is given as a final irregularity display at the end of the game during which the irregularity occurs. In this case, an arrangement order irregularity alarm is given to the management division or the pit of the casino through the external output means 100, and in addition, the arrangement order irregularity lamp(s) 101 is(are) lighted to indicate the irregularity in the arrangement order of the cards 1.


Next, an irregularity in the arrangement order of the cards will be described. FIG. 5(a) and FIG. 5(b) each show a typical example of an irregularity in the arrangement order of the cards. FIG. 5(a) shows an example where the cards 1 drawn from the card housing unit 5 have the same suit (Clubs) with sequential figures (number, rank) beginning from Ace. FIG. 5(b) shows an example where the cards 1 drawn from the card housing unit 5 consist of 9 cards with the same rank (3). Generally, the cards of the shuffled playing cards 1s are shuffled by a random number generator or the like so as to be arranged in a random order. The arrangement order as shown in FIGS. 5(a) and 5(b) indicates an irregular shuffling of the shuffled playing card set 1 s, which is thus determined to be irregular. Including the examples described above, possible examples of an irregularity in the arrangement order are listed below:


(1) a case where a state in which the rank of a card is larger (or smaller) by one than the card preceding that card continues for a predetermined number of cards (for example, 1, 2, 3, 4, ---, K) (as shown in FIG. 5(a));


(2) a case where cards with the same rank continue for a predetermined number of cards (for example, A, A, A, A, ---) (as shown in FIG. 5(b));


(3) a case where the same sequence is repeated throughout a predetermined number of cards (for example, A, Q, 10, A, Q, 10, ---);


(4) a case where cards with the same suit continue for at least a predetermined number of cards (for example, 13 consecutive cards with Hearts); and


(5) a case where the arrangement order of a predetermined number of cards matches an arrangement order registered in advance (this is a case where the arrangement order used in a separate card manufacturing process appears, which case can also be considered irregular (shuffling failure)).


These irregular patterns are stored in the memory 13 in advance, and the control unit 12 compares the information of the cards 1 read by the card reading unit 8 with such patterns. If the arrangement order of a predetermined number of cards 1 matches any of these irregular patterns, it is determined to be irregular.


A sample case of an irregularity in the arrangement order of the shuffled playing cards described in (5) above, where the arrangement order of a predetermined number of cards matches an arrangement order that has been registered in advance, is a case where the state in which the suit and rank of a card drawn are the same as those of the card preceding it by 52 cards continues for a plurality of cards. This is to enable the detection of an irregular case where a shuffling of a plurality of decks has failed for some reason, and instead each of the 52 cards is arranged in the same arrangement order. Note that as another example of an irregularity in the arrangement order, the arrangement order of the cards used when manufacturing the cards, and which is unique to the card manufacturing process may be defined as an irregular case, and stored in advance.


Further, as a example of an irregularity in the arrangement order of the shuffled playing cards, (7) a case that corresponds to a case that has been registered in advance as an irregular case and (8) a case where cards with the same rank and suit are drawn for at least a predetermined number of cards, can be considered. Regarding (7) a case that corresponds to a case that has been registered in advance as an irregular case, for example, the same arrangement order as the that of the rank and suit of each card (plurality of the cards) previously read by the card shoe apparatus 2 continue for a predetermined number of cards or a predetermined number of games in the set of cards currently read by the card shoe apparatus 2. Regarding (8) a case where cards with the same rank and suit are drawn for at least a predetermined number of cards, for example, the shuffled playing cards 1s housed in the card housing unit 5 are consist of the predetermined number of decks of cards (usually 6, 8, 9 or 10 decks), and the cards the number of which is more than that number of decks (the 9th card of the same mark is drawn in the 8 decks of the shuffled playing cards) are not supposed to be housed in the card housing unit 5, and if the cards the number of which is more than that number of decks are drawn, that means existence of irregularity.


In this case, the card shoe apparatus 2 stores at least several sets (“8 decks” times “several sets”) of the sequence of the suit and the rank in a result of reading cards previously.


According to such a embodiment, the case where the cards which were previously used are not disposed and illegally reused (where the sequence of the cards which were previously read re-appears) can be found as shuffle-irregular.


An irregularity in the arrangement order of the shuffled playing cards refers to a case where an irregular state continues throughout a predetermined number of cards. It is further preferable that a preliminary alarm of irregularity is given, as a stage prior to the occurrence of an irregularity in the arrangement order, during the card that is several cards before the end of a predetermined number of cards. The preliminary alarm is given in a form different from the final alarm, for example, by characters, in a certain color, or with a different lamp. Also, since it is a preliminary alarm, if a state does not continue to be irregular throughout a predetermined number of cards and returns to a random state, then the preliminary alarm is cancelled.


Next, the card reading unit 8 that reads the code 3 from a card 1 will be described in detail with reference to FIG. 6. FIG. 6 is a plan view in which main portions of the card shoe apparatus 2 are enlarged. In FIG. 6, some portions are enlarged for the purpose of description, and thus FIG. 6 does not necessarily accurately reflect the relative scale. The card reading unit 8 is provided in the card guide unit 7 that guides the cards 1 drawn one by one from the opening 13 of the card housing unit 5 onto the game table 6, with the opening 13 provided in a front portion of the card housing unit 5. The card guide unit 7 is an inclined surface, and a card guide 14 is attached to a portion of the edge of each of both sides thereof, with the card guide 14 also serving as a sensor cover. Also, each of the two card guides 14 is configured to be attachable/detachable with screws or the like (not shown). When a card guide 14 is removed, a sensor group 15 of the card reading portion 8 is exposed. The sensor group 15 is composed of four sensors, including two ultraviolet reactive sensors (UV sensors) 20 and 21, and object detection sensors 22 and 23.


The object detection sensors 22 and 23 are optical fiber sensors that each detect the presence of a card 1. The object detection sensor 22 is placed in the upstream side of the card guide unit 7 relative to the travel direction of the card 1, and the object detection sensor 23 is placed in the downstream side of the card guide unit 7 relative to the travel direction of the card 1. As shown in FIG. 6, the object detection sensors 22 and 23 are provided in the upstream and downstream sides of the UV sensors 20 and 21, respectively. Each of the UV sensors 20 and 21 includes an LED (UV LED) that emits an ultraviolet ray and a detector. The marks M are printed on the card 1 in UV luminescent ink that emits color when UV ray is applied. The card 1 is irradiated with the UV ray (black light), and the detector detects the light reflected by the marks M of the code 3 of the card 1. The UV sensors 20 and 21 are connected to the control unit 12 of the card reading unit 8 via a cable. In the card reading unit 8, the arrangement patterns of the marks M are determined based on the output signals of the detectors of the UV sensors 20 and 21, and the number (rank) corresponding to the code 3 is determined.


In the card reading unit 8, the start and end of the reading performed by the UV sensors 20 and 21 are controlled by the control unit 12 based on the detection signals from the object detection sensors 22 and 23. Also, the control unit 12 determines whether the card 1 has normally passed through the card guide unit 7 based on the detection signals from the object detection sensors 22 and 23. As shown in FIG. 3, the rectangular marks M are arranged within a framework of two rows with four columns on each of the upper and bottom edges of the card 1, and the arrangement of such marks M indicates the rank (number) and the suit (Heart, Spade or the like) of the card 1. If the UV sensor(s) 20 and/or 21 detect(s) a mark M, such UV sensor(s) give(s) out an on signal. The card reading unit 8 determines the relative relation between the signals received from the two UV sensors 20 and 21. By this way, the card reading unit 8 identifies the code based on the relative difference or the like between the two marks M detected by the two UV sensors 20 and 21, thereby identifying the number (rank) and the type (suit) of the corresponding card 1.


The relation between the code 3 and the output of the on signals of the two UV sensors 20 and 21 are shown in FIG. 7. It is possible to identify a predetermined arrangement pattern of the marks M based on the comparison results of the relative changes in the output of the on signals of the UV sensors 20 and 21. As a result, in two rows (the upper and lower rows), four types of arrangement patterns of the mark M are possible, and since patterns are printed in four columns, it is possible to form 256 types of codes (4×4×4×4). Fifty two (52) different playing cards are each assigned to one of the 256 codes, and the relations of such assignment are stored in a memory or by a program as an association table. A configuration is thereby adopted in which the card reading unit 8 can, by identifying the code 3, identify the number (rank) and the type (suit) of the card 1 based on that predetermined association table (not shown). Also, 52 cards can be freely associated with 52 codes out of the 256 codes to be stored in the association table, and thus, there will be a variety of associations between them. Therefore, it is possible to change the associations between the 256 codes and the 52 cards depending on the time or place. Preferably, the code is printed with a paint material that becomes visible when irradiated with a UV ray, and placed in a position where it does not overlap the indications of the card types or indexes 102.


Next, the configuration of the control unit 12 will be described in further detail. The control unit 12 and the like are achieved by a computer apparatus. For example, the process function of automatically determining the winner/loser of a game (in the control unit 12) is achieved by installing in a computer a program for determining the winner/loser, and that program is executed by a processor of the computer. The numbers of the cards sequentially taken out onto the game table 6 are acquired using the UV sensors 20 and 21 in the card reading unit 8, and the numbers of the cards thus acquired are stored sequentially in the memory 13. At this point, information on which card 1 is dealt in what order to which player is also stored. The dealing order of the number and suit of the cards are stored. Although the cards of the shuffled playing card set 1s have generally been shuffled in advance by a random number generator or the like so as to be arranged in random, if any of the irregular patterns described above appears, it indicates the possibility of an irregular shuffling of the shuffled playing card set 1s. The arrangement orders of the cards that should be determined as irregular patterns are stored in the memory 13 in advance or programmed such that the control unit 12 compares the information on the actual arrangement order of the cards 1 that were read by the card reading unit 8 and dealt with the irregular patterns, and if a predetermined number of the cards 1 are drawn in any irregular pattern, it is determined to be irregular.


As shown in FIGS. 8 and 9, the card shoe apparatus 2 comprises the card movement restriction means 30 that restricts the movement of the card 1 to/from the card housing unit 5. In FIG. 9(a), the card movement restriction means 30 is provided in the card guide 14 of the card guide unit 7 that guides the cards 1 taken out one by one from the opening 3, which is provided in a front portion of the card housing unit 5. The card movement restriction means 30 has a structure by which when a card 1 passes through a slot 33 between the card guide unit 7 and the card guide 14, a lock member 34 presses the card 1 to prohibit the movement of the card 1 within the slot 33. The lock member 34 is capable of moving in the direction indicated by the arrow M by a driving unit 35 composed of an electromagnetic solenoid, a piezoelectric device or the like, such that it can take two positions, namely, a position where the card 1 is pressed (restricted position) and a position where the card 1 is allowed to pass through. The driving unit 35 is controlled by the control apparatus 12, and causes the lock member 34 to move to two positions, namely, a position where the card 1 is pressed and a position where the card 1 is allowed to pass through. The rules of the baccarat game are programmed and stored in advance in the control apparatus 12.


Next, an alternative embodiment of the card movement restriction means 30 will be described with reference to FIG. 9(b). According to this embodiment, a card movement restriction means 40 has a structure by which when a card 1 passes through the slot 33 between the card guide unit 7 and the card guide 14, a lock member 36 protrudes into the slot 33 to prohibit movement of the card 1. The lock member 36 is capable of moving in the direction indicated by the arrow M by a driving unit 37 composed of an electromagnetic solenoid, a piezoelectric device or the like, such that it can take two positions, namely, a position where movement of the card 1 is prohibited (restricted position) and a position where the card 1 is allowed to pass through. The driving unit 37 is controlled by the control apparatus 12, and causes the lock member 36 to move to two positions, namely, a position where movement of the card 1 is prohibited and a position where the card 1 is allowed to pass through.


The card movement restriction means 30 (40) is caused to function as a result of the driving unit 35 or 37 being controlled by the control apparatus 12 to prevent the fraudulent movement of the card 1. The card movement restriction means 30 (40) is provided with the object detection sensors 22 and 23 as sensors for detecting movement of the card 1, and has a function of detecting movement of the card 1 with these sensors 22 and 23 to restrict the movement of a card. The contents of control object as the fraudulent entry/exit of the card (programmed contents) includes at least the following 1) and 2).


An error signal output unit 50, which, upon the operation of the card entry/exit restriction unit 30 (40), gives an external signal regarding such operation (a lamp is illuminated and an alarm sound is emitted), is provided, and the operation of which is controlled by the control apparatus 12.


As a practical use of the above embodiment, it is applied to controlling the end of the game in the reading apparatus of the shuffled playing cards on the game table. As already explained, the cut card 1c is inserted in the shuffled playing card set 1 s before it is set in the card shoe apparatus 2. The cut card 1c may be inserted in a predetermined position of at the side or the like of the shuffled playing cards set 1 s at the manufacturing of the shuffled playing cards set 1 s in a factory or may be prepared separately, in any case, the cut card 1c is inserted within the latter half portion of the shuffled playing card set 1s when used in a game (in the last quarter or one-fifth of the shuffled playing card set 1s). The cut card 1c is used to end a game at the game table leaving about 20 to 40 cards 1 in the card shoe apparatus 2 to prevent any player and the like counting the ranks of the cards 1 dealt during a game to predict the ranks of the cards when the number of cards not yet dealt becomes small. Therefore, when the cut card 1c is drawn onto the game table, use of the shuffled playing card set 1s currently in the card housing unit is stopped soon, or after that game or a few games thereafter.


To implement this rule, the control unit 12 further has a cut card checking function of reading the cut card 1c by the card reading unit 8 and memorizing the information that indicates the cut card 1c is read in the memory 13 when the cut card is drawn onto the game table. When the cut card 1c is drawn to the game table, use of the shuffled playing card set 1s currently in the card housing is stopped soon, or after that game or a few games thereafter. The card entry/exit restriction unit 30 (40) is caused to function as a result of the driving unit 35 or 37 being controlled by the program of the control apparatus 12 to prevent the further drawing of the card 1 for stopping further use of the shuffled playing card set 1s. The end of the use of the shuffled playing card set 1s in the card housing 5 has determined, then the end of the use of the cards is reported to an administration section of the casino or pit via the outside output means 100. Furthermore the control unit 12 is configured to have a function of informing the dealer or the like about the end by the display made by lamps or a liquid crystal display unit 102 separately. The cut card 1c is normally colored in the black or the like in order to distinguish the other cards, and become recognizable. In addition, the code which is configured to be identified that it is the cut card itself is printed in UV ink or the like which is invisible under normal conditions. The code attached to the cut card 1c which is drawn onto the game table is read by the card reading unit 8 in the same way as the above embodiment.


Although the suitable embodiment of the present invention that can be considered at present has been explained hereinbefore, it is to be understood that various modifications can be made to the embodiment, and it is intended that accompanying claims include such all the modifications within the true spirit and the scope of the present invention.

Claims
  • 1. A table game system for detecting arrangements of shuffled playing cards comprising: a shuffled card set made up of a predetermined number of decks which have been shuffled,a card shoe apparatus for storing shuffled playing cards and used by a dealer to manually deal the cards housed in the card shoe apparatus one by one onto a game table, wherein the card shoe apparatus stores rules of a card game and determines the a result of the card game, the apparatus including: a card housing unit for housing the shuffled playing cards;an opening through which the cards are drawn from the card housing unit one by one;a card reading unit that reads information from each card as it is drawn from the card housing unit; andan output unit that outputs the result;wherein the table game system includes a computer with memory which detects whether or not there is any special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards based on the information of the cards read by the card reading unit, wherein the special arrangement is at least one of the following cases: (1) the rank of a card read by the card reading unit is larger or smaller by one than a preceding card read by the card reading unit for a predetermined number of cards;(2) the same rank continues for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit;(3) the same suit continues for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit; and(4) the same sequence is repeated for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit.
  • 2. The table game system according to claim 1, wherein a wired or wireless communication link is used as a means of outputting an alarm.
  • 3. The table game system according to claim 1, wherein the special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards occurs when the special arrangement continues throughout a predetermined number of cards, and before the special arrangement is detected, a preliminary alarm is provided.
  • 4. The table game system according to claim 2, wherein the special arrangement alarm is given by a two-phase alarm system; a first phase in which an alarm is displayed on a side display of the card shoe apparatus upon the detection of a special arrangement; and a second phase in which the special arrangement alarm is provided on a display at the end of a game during which a special arrangement occurs.
  • 5. The table game system according to claim 1, further comprising a card exit restriction means that restricts the exit of a card from the card housing unit, wherein the system's computer activates the card exit restriction means when the computer detects a special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards.
  • 6. A table game system comprising: shuffled playing cards made up of a predetermined number of cards, having been shuffled in advance, and containing information representing a rank thereof as a code provided with the shuffled playing cards; and,a card shoe apparatus, including a computer with memory, for storing the shuffled playing cards on a game table and used to manually deal the cards housed in the card shoe apparatus one by one onto the game table, and containing in the memory the rules of a card game for determining a result of the card game, wherein the apparatus comprises: a card housing unit for housing the shuffled playing cards;an opening through which the cards are drawn from the card housing unit one by one,a card reading unit that reads a code from the card being drawn from the card housing unit, andan output unit that outputs the result,wherein, the table game system includes a computer which detects whether or not there is any special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards based on the codes read from the cards by the card reading unit, wherein the special arrangement comprises at least one of the following cases: (1) the rank of a card read by the card reading unit is larger or smaller by one than a preceding card read by the card reading unit for a predetermined number of cards;(2) the same rank continues for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit;(3) the same suit continues for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit; and(4) the same sequence is repeated for a predetermined number of cards read by the card reading unit.
  • 7. The table game system according to claim 6, wherein a wired or wireless communication link is used as a means of outputting an alarm.
  • 8. The table game system according to claim 7, wherein the alarm is given by a two-phase alarm system; a first phase in which an alarm is displayed on a side display of the card shoe apparatus upon the detection of an special arrangement before a second phase; and a second phase in which the special arrangement alarm is given as a final special arrangement display.
  • 9. The table game system according to claim 6, wherein the special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards occurs when the special arrangement continues throughout a predetermined number of cards, and before the special arrangement is detected, a preliminary alarm is provided.
  • 10. The table game system according to claim 6, further comprising a card exit restriction means that restricts the exit of a card from the card housing unit, where in the computer of the card shoe apparatus can activate the card exit restriction means when the computer detects a special arrangement of the shuffled playing cards.
  • 11. The table game system according to claim 1, wherein the table game system is a baccarat table game system.
  • 12. The table game system according to claim 6, wherein the table game system is a baccarat table game system.
Priority Claims (2)
Number Date Country Kind
2012-227444 Sep 2012 JP national
PCT/JP2012/006230 Sep 2012 WO international
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/JP2013/004956 8/22/2013 WO 00
Publishing Document Publishing Date Country Kind
WO2014/049946 4/3/2014 WO A
US Referenced Citations (103)
Number Name Date Kind
4513696 Fujii et al. Apr 1985 A
4513969 Samsel, Jr. Apr 1985 A
4534562 Cuff et al. Aug 1985 A
4586712 Lorber et al. May 1986 A
4794239 Allais Dec 1988 A
5067713 Soules et al. Nov 1991 A
5166502 Rendleman et al. Nov 1992 A
5169155 Soules et al. Dec 1992 A
5259907 Soules et al. Nov 1993 A
5331141 Kaneko Jul 1994 A
5374061 Albrecht Dec 1994 A
5669813 Jairazbhoy et al. Sep 1997 A
5669816 Garczynski et al. Sep 1997 A
5707287 McCrea, Jr. Jan 1998 A
5722893 Hill et al. Mar 1998 A
5779546 Meissner Jul 1998 A
5814804 Kostizak Sep 1998 A
5911626 McCrea, Jr. Jun 1999 A
5941769 Order Aug 1999 A
5989122 Roblejo Nov 1999 A
6039650 Hill Mar 2000 A
6042150 Daley Mar 2000 A
6066857 Fantone et al. May 2000 A
6093103 McCrea, Jr. Jul 2000 A
6098892 Peoples, Jr. Aug 2000 A
6126166 Lorson et al. Oct 2000 A
6217447 Lofink et al. Apr 2001 B1
6270406 Sultan Aug 2001 B1
6460848 Soltys et al. Oct 2002 B1
6527191 Jannersten Mar 2003 B1
6582301 Hill Jun 2003 B2
6588751 Grauzer et al. Jul 2003 B1
6629894 Purton Oct 2003 B1
6637622 Robinson Oct 2003 B1
6638161 Soltys et al. Oct 2003 B2
7029009 Grauzer et al. Apr 2006 B2
7093130 Kobayashi et al. Aug 2006 B1
7172507 Fujimoto et al. Feb 2007 B2
7222852 Soltys et al. May 2007 B2
7422522 Fujimoto et al. Sep 2008 B2
7762889 Shigeta Jul 2010 B2
7946586 Krenn et al. May 2011 B2
7950663 Schubert May 2011 B2
7967672 Shigeta Jun 2011 B2
8221244 French Jul 2012 B2
8309163 Van Duren et al. Nov 2012 B2
8556262 Shigeta Oct 2013 B2
8590896 Krenn et al. Nov 2013 B2
8801516 Shigeta Aug 2014 B2
9649550 Shigeta May 2017 B2
20020017481 Johnson et al. Feb 2002 A1
20020063389 Breeding et al. May 2002 A1
20020068635 Hill Jun 2002 A1
20020155869 Soltys et al. Oct 2002 A1
20020163125 Grauzer et al. Nov 2002 A1
20020165029 Soltys et al. Nov 2002 A1
20030003997 Vuong et al. Jan 2003 A1
20030171142 Kaji et al. Sep 2003 A1
20030176209 Soltys et al. Sep 2003 A1
20030195025 Hill Oct 2003 A1
20040026636 Shigeta Feb 2004 A1
20040100026 Haggard May 2004 A1
20040259618 Soltys Dec 2004 A1
20050012270 Schubert et al. Jan 2005 A1
20050051955 Schubert et al. Mar 2005 A1
20050062226 Schubert et al. Mar 2005 A1
20050062227 Grauzer Mar 2005 A1
20050104290 Grauzer et al. May 2005 A1
20050110210 Soltys et al. May 2005 A1
20050121852 Soltys et al. Jun 2005 A1
20050137005 Soltys et al. Jun 2005 A1
20060063577 Downs, III Mar 2006 A1
20060247036 Shigeta Nov 2006 A1
20060279040 Downs, III Dec 2006 A1
20070018389 Downs, III Jan 2007 A1
20070216092 Fleckenstein Sep 2007 A1
20070296151 Kyrychenko Dec 2007 A1
20080006997 Scheper et al. Jan 2008 A1
20080105750 Shigeta May 2008 A1
20080224394 Shigeta Sep 2008 A1
20090066021 Shigeta Mar 2009 A1
20090134575 Dickenson et al. May 2009 A1
20090140492 Yoseloff Jun 2009 A1
20090224476 Grauzer Sep 2009 A1
20100133754 Shigeta Jun 2010 A1
20100213667 Grauzer et al. Aug 2010 A1
20100276887 Yoshida Nov 2010 A1
20100289214 Just Nov 2010 A1
20100327525 Shigeta Dec 2010 A1
20110034243 Shigeta Feb 2011 A1
20110130185 Walker Jun 2011 A1
20110148038 Laughlin Jun 2011 A1
20110198805 Downs, III et al. Aug 2011 A1
20110210175 Shigeta Sep 2011 A1
20110275432 Lutnick et al. Nov 2011 A1
20120091656 Blaha et al. Apr 2012 A1
20120306152 Krishnamurty et al. Dec 2012 A1
20130207344 Shigeta Aug 2013 A1
20130303277 Shigeta Nov 2013 A1
20140042697 Berube et al. Feb 2014 A1
20150014925 Miller et al. Jan 2015 A1
20150190707 Shigeta Jul 2015 A1
20150375095 Shigeta Dec 2015 A1
Foreign Referenced Citations (54)
Number Date Country
2013203307 Apr 2014 AU
2015202960 Jun 2015 AU
101099896 Jan 2008 CN
101437586 May 2009 CN
101484216 Jul 2009 CN
101588847 Nov 2009 CN
101678232 Mar 2010 CN
101711177 May 2010 CN
101884840 Nov 2010 CN
101920104 Dec 2010 CN
101972544 Feb 2011 CN
102307633 Jan 2012 CN
202398088 Aug 2012 CN
2380143 Apr 2003 GB
H5-398 Jan 1993 JP
H5-20512 Jan 1993 JP
H9-215812 Mar 1997 JP
H9-144353 Jun 1997 JP
H10508236 Aug 1998 JP
2000327255 Nov 2000 JP
2001222687 Aug 2001 JP
2002165916 Jun 2002 JP
2002224443 Aug 2002 JP
2002282413 Oct 2002 JP
2003052902 Feb 2003 JP
2003070956 Mar 2003 JP
2003144742 May 2003 JP
2003250950 Sep 2003 JP
2004215806 Aug 2004 JP
2005198668 Jul 2005 JP
2005267625 Sep 2005 JP
2005296634 Oct 2005 JP
2007236995 Sep 2007 JP
2008161479 Jul 2008 JP
2008188471 Aug 2008 JP
2009213520 Sep 2009 JP
199614115 May 1996 WO
199943404 Sep 1999 WO
2001056670 Aug 2001 WO
0205914 Jan 2002 WO
2002064225 Aug 2002 WO
2003026763 Apr 2003 WO
2003078006 Sep 2003 WO
2003078006 Sep 2003 WO
2009069708 Jun 2009 WO
2010019708 Feb 2010 WO
2010055328 May 2010 WO
2010056562 May 2010 WO
2012035742 Mar 2012 WO
2012053179 Apr 2012 WO
2012166197 Dec 2012 WO
2013116297 Aug 2013 WO
2014049664 Apr 2014 WO
2010052573 May 2014 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (38)
Entry
New Zealand Patent Application No. 704620, First Examination Report dated Jul. 31, 2015.
Chinese Patent Application No. 201310225940.6, First Office Action dated Dec. 3, 2015.
New Zealand Patent Application No. 706311, First Examination Report dated Dec. 8, 2015.
Korean Patent Application No. 10-2015-7007553, Office Action dated Mar. 28, 2016.
New Zealand Patent Application No. 716059, First Examination Report dated May 6, 2016.
Australian Patent Application No. 2015202960, Examination Report No. 1 dated Jun. 9, 2016.
Korean Patent Application No. 10-2015-7007316, Notice of Allowance dated Jun. 16, 2016.
Chinese Patent Application No. 201310220992.4, Notice of Allowance dated Jul. 4, 2016.
New Zealand Patent Application No. 720973, First Examination Report dated Jul. 29, 2016.
European Patent Application No. 13842336.3, Search Report dated Aug. 24, 2016.
Australian Patent Application No. 2008200596, Examiner's First Report dated Nov. 6, 2009.
Australian Patent Application No. 2010235931, Examiner's Report No. 2 dated Jul. 11, 2011.
International Application No. PCT/JP2005/003789, International Preliminary Report on Patentability dated Feb. 2, 2006.
International Application No. PCT/JP2005/003789, International Search Report dated Apr. 26, 2005.
International Application No. PCT/JP2012/006230, International Search Report dated Nov. 13, 2012.
U.S. Appl. No. 10/542,073, Final Office Action dated Apr. 14, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/884,021, Non-Final Office Action dated Dec. 8, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/929,727, Non-Final Office Action dated Oct. 1, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 11/929,727, Non-Final Office Action dated Mar. 7, 2011.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/231,657, Non-Final Office Action dated Mar. 19, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/231,657, Final Office Action dated Dec. 8, 2010.
U.S. Appl. No. 12/825,261, Non-Final Office Action dated Nov. 23, 2010.
Australian Patent Application No. 2013203307, Patent Examination Report No. 1 dated Oct. 15, 2014.
Australian Patent Application No. 2013203316, Patent Examination Report No. 1 dated Dec. 10, 2014.
International Application No. PCT/JP2013/004956, International Search Report dated Sep. 24, 2013.
Australian Patent Application No. 716059, First Examination Report dated May 6, 2016.
Australian Office Action, Australian Patent Application No. 2016208351, dated May 11, 2017.
Australian Office Action, Australian Patent Application No. 2016208352, dated May 11, 2017.
New Zealand First Examination Report dated Dec. 4, 2017 for corresponding New Zealand application 731453.
Chinese Allowance dated Mar. 19, 2018 for corresponding Chinese application 201510315068.3.
U.S. Office Action dated Jun. 4, 2018 for U.S. Appl. No. 15/456,322.
Office Action dated Aug. 29, 2017 for JP Application 2016-240958 (Japanese language).
Chinese Office Action, Chinese Patent Application No. 201380049993.5, dated Jan. 4, 2017.
Chinese Office Action, Chinese Patent Application No. 201280075345.2, dated Jan. 3, 2017.
Australian Examination report No. 2 dated Jun. 17, 2018 for corresponding AU application 2016262639.
Australian Examination Report dated Jan. 19, 2018 for corresponding Australian application 2016262639.
Examination Report No. 1 dated Aug. 3, 2018 for AU Application 2017225160.
Office Action dated Aug. 9, 2018 for U.S. Appl. No. 14/419,605.
Related Publications (1)
Number Date Country
20150238849 A1 Aug 2015 US