Offered for your purchase consideration today... 

You are purchasing 

(THREE~3~THREE) 

Liar's Poker $1 Dollar United States Federal Reserve Notes Bills, 

Series 1974, 1977A & 1981

THREE~3~THREE~ 

Five of a Kinds~"2's"~DEUCES! 

You receive Serial Numbers~ 22226255, 22922429, 24202122

ALL these "CASER NOTES" bills were acquired from an estate of a prolific liars poker player! By the collection, he has what are termed "caser notes", FOR ALL the values from Zero's for TENS and One's for ACES and every number in between.

 

These bills bear wear consistent with everyday commerce, ie. wrinkles and creases and abrading. The average life of a dollar bill is eighteen months. These all bear wear consistent with the high end of their life!

 

The Game of Liar's Poker...

In Liar's Poker, players use the serial numbers on dollar bills to make bids, bluffing and challenging each other. Each player receives a dollar bill and privately notes their serial number. The game revolves around making a bid, predicting the number of times a particular digit appears across all players' bills, and then either increasing the bid or challenging the previous player's bid.

 

Here's a breakdown of the rules for Liar's Poker: 

1. Initial Setup: Each player receives a dollar bill and secretly looks at its serial number. 2. Bidding: The first player makes an opening bid, predicting how many times a specific digit appears across all players' bills. For example, "three 6s" means the player believes there are at least three 6s in total among all the bills. 

3.Raising or Challenging: Subsequent players can either raise the bid (by calling for a higher number of the same digit or a higher digit) or challenge the previous bid. 4.Challenging: When a player challenges, all players reveal their bills. If the bid was accurate (the number of the challenged digit in total is at least the bid), the bidder wins from all other players. If the bid was inaccurate, the challenger wins from all other players. 

5.Winning: The player who correctly calls a bluff or makes an accurate bid wins from all other players. Example: Player 1 bids "three 8s," meaning they believe there are at least three 8's in total across all bills. Player 2 could raise the bid to "three 9s," or challenge Player 1. If Player 2 challenges and the serial numbers reveal fewer than three 8s, Player 2 wins. 

Key Strategies: Bluffing: Players often bluff, bidding higher than they can actually back up, hoping to trick others into not challenging. 

Statistical Reasoning: Players can use some statistical reasoning to estimate the likelihood of certain digits appearing.

 

Ships carefully packed (archival sleeved) and thoughtfully wrapped and sent via USPS / Ebay Tracking Envelope to ALL 48 Contiguous U.S. States.