The blackjack variant where the house hides nothing. Both dealer cards are dealt face up at 7000 BDT, giving you complete information before you make a single decision. It changes everything about how you play.
One visual comparison tells the whole story.
You see one dealer card. The hole card stays hidden until after you act. You're making decisions with incomplete information.
Partial InformationBoth dealer cards are face up at 7000 BDT. You know exactly what you're up against before you hit, stand, double, or split.
Full InformationDouble Exposure Blackjack is one of the most interesting blackjack variants ever created, and it's available right now at 7000 BDT. The concept is straightforward: instead of dealing one card face up and one face down to the dealer, both cards are placed face up on the table. You see everything before you make a single decision.
This sounds like a massive advantage for the player, and in terms of information it genuinely is. Knowing the dealer's full hand before you act changes the entire decision-making process. In standard blackjack, a lot of your strategy is based on probability — you're guessing what the hole card might be and making the statistically best decision based on that uncertainty. In Double Exposure at 7000 BDT, that uncertainty is gone. You know exactly what you need to beat.
Of course, the casino doesn't just hand you this advantage for free. Double Exposure Blackjack comes with a set of rule adjustments that compensate for the information advantage. Understanding these rule changes — and how they affect your strategy — is the key to playing Double Exposure well at 7000 BDT.
The full information advantage comes with trade-offs. Here's every rule you need to know before you sit down.
These advantages are real and significant. Knowing the dealer's total before you act eliminates the biggest source of uncertainty in standard blackjack. At 7000 BDT, this makes every decision cleaner and more confident.
These adjustments are how the house maintains its edge at 7000 BDT. The tie rule is the most impactful — in standard blackjack, a tie is a push and you keep your bet. Here, most ties go to the dealer. This is the biggest single rule change to account for in your strategy.
| Rule | Standard Blackjack | Double Exposure at 7000 BDT | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dealer cards | 1 up, 1 down | Both face up | Player advantage |
| Blackjack payout | 3:2 | 1:1 (even money) | House advantage |
| Tied hands | Push (bet returned) | Dealer wins (except tied 21) | House advantage |
| Insurance | Available | Not available | Minimal impact |
| Double down | Any two cards | 9, 10, 11 only | Slight house advantage |
| Splitting | Multiple times | Once per hand | Slight house advantage |
| Dealer soft 17 | Varies by table | Dealer hits soft 17 | Slight house advantage |
| Number of decks | 1–8 depending on table | 8 decks | Slight house advantage |
Standard blackjack strategy doesn't apply here. Double Exposure requires its own approach because you have full information about the dealer's hand.
If your hand total beats the dealer's visible total and you're not at risk of busting, stand. There's no reason to take extra cards when you're already winning. This is the most fundamental shift from standard blackjack strategy at 7000 BDT.
If the dealer's total is higher than yours, you must hit — even on totals you'd normally stand on in standard blackjack. Standing on 15 against a dealer showing 18 is an automatic loss at 7000 BDT. You have to chase the dealer's total.
You can only double on 9, 10, or 11 at 7000 BDT. Double when your total plus a likely 10-value card would beat the dealer's visible total. If the dealer is showing 20, doubling on 11 is still risky — you'd need exactly a 10 to tie, and ties go to the dealer.
Splitting is limited to once per hand at 7000 BDT. Only split when the resulting hands have a strong chance of beating the dealer's known total. Splitting 8s against a dealer showing 17 makes sense. Splitting against a dealer showing 20 rarely does.
Because the dealer wins most ties at 7000 BDT, you need to aim to beat the dealer's total rather than match it. If the dealer shows 17, you need 18 or higher to win — not 17. This shifts your hitting threshold upward compared to standard blackjack.
If the dealer's two visible cards are an Ace and a 10-value card, that's blackjack and you lose immediately — even if you also have blackjack. The only exception is a tied 21 with more than two cards, which is a push. Factor this into your session expectations at 7000 BDT.
The difference between optimal and random play is enormous in Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT. Learning the strategy properly is the single most valuable thing you can do before playing.
| Your Hand | Dealer Shows | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Hard 12–16 | Lower than your total | Stand |
| Hard 12–16 | Higher than your total | Hit |
| Hard 17+ | Any | Stand |
| 11 | 10 or lower | Double Down |
| Pair of 8s | 15 or lower | Split |
| Pair of Aces | Any except 21 | Split |
| Any total | Dealer has 21 | Hit (can't win by standing) |
From registration to your first hand of Double Exposure Blackjack — here's the full process.
Register at 7000 BDT with your mobile number. The process takes under three minutes and your account is active immediately — no waiting, no verification delays.
Add funds instantly using bKash, Nagad, or Rocket. Your first deposit at 7000 BDT unlocks the welcome bonus, giving you extra balance to use at the blackjack tables right away.
Navigate to Double Exposure Blackjack from the header menu or the Game section at 7000 BDT. The game loads directly in your browser — no download needed on desktop or mobile.
Set your chip size, place your bet, and watch both dealer cards appear face up. Use the strategy you've learned to make the best decision on every hand at 7000 BDT.
Double Exposure Blackjack has been around since the 1970s, when it was introduced in Las Vegas as a way to attract players who were frustrated by the hidden hole card in standard blackjack. The idea was simple: show the player everything, and let them make fully informed decisions. The catch, of course, was the rule adjustments that came with it — particularly the tie rule and the reduced blackjack payout.
At 7000 BDT, Double Exposure Blackjack is available as a digital table game with clean graphics and a straightforward interface. The game runs on a standard eight-deck shoe, and the rules are consistent with the classic Double Exposure format. If you've played standard blackjack before, the transition is manageable — but you do need to consciously adjust your strategy, because the instincts you've built up from standard blackjack will lead you wrong in several common situations.
In standard blackjack, a tie — or push — means you get your bet back. It's a neutral outcome. In Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT, most ties go to the dealer. The only exception is a tied 21, which is a push. This single rule change has a bigger impact on the house edge than any other adjustment in the game.
What this means in practice is that you can't afford to match the dealer's total — you need to beat it. If the dealer is showing 17, standing on 17 yourself is a losing play. You need to hit and try to reach 18 or higher. This is counterintuitive if you're used to standard blackjack, where standing on 17 is almost always correct. In Double Exposure at 7000 BDT, the calculus is completely different because you know exactly what you're up against.
In standard blackjack, a natural blackjack — an Ace and a 10-value card on your first two cards — pays 3:2. On a ৳1,000 bet, that's ৳1,500 back. In Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT, blackjack pays 1:1, the same as any other winning hand. You still win, but you don't get the premium payout.
This matters because natural blackjacks occur roughly once every 21 hands on average. Over a long session, the difference between 3:2 and 1:1 on those hands adds up. It's one of the main reasons the house edge in Double Exposure is higher than in a well-run standard blackjack game, even accounting for the information advantage you get from seeing both dealer cards.
One of the most common complaints from new blackjack players is the frustration of making what feels like the right decision, only to lose because the dealer's hidden card turned out to be something unexpected. Double Exposure Blackjack removes that frustration entirely. When you lose a hand at 7000 BDT, you know exactly why — the dealer had a better total, and you saw it from the start.
This transparency makes the game feel fairer, even though the house edge is comparable to standard blackjack when both are played optimally. There's something psychologically satisfying about making decisions with complete information, and many players find Double Exposure more engaging as a result. The strategy is also more intuitive once you understand the core principle: beat the dealer's visible total, and don't settle for a tie.
Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT plays at a similar pace to standard blackjack — roughly 60 to 80 hands per hour depending on how quickly you make decisions. With a house edge of around 0.69% under optimal play, your expected loss per hour is relatively low compared to most casino games. But variance can still swing your session balance significantly in either direction over short periods.
A sensible approach is to bring at least 40 to 50 times your minimum bet to each session. If you're playing at the ৳200 minimum table at 7000 BDT, that means having ৳8,000 to ৳10,000 set aside for the session. This gives you enough cushion to ride out a losing streak without being forced to stop before the variance evens out. Never chase losses by increasing your bet size after a bad run — this is the fastest way to burn through a bankroll in any blackjack variant.
Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT is fully optimised for mobile play. The game interface scales cleanly to any screen size, and the betting controls are designed to work comfortably with touch input. You don't need to download anything — open your mobile browser, log in to your 7000 BDT account, and the game loads directly in the browser.
The card display is clear and readable on smaller screens, which matters in Double Exposure because you're always looking at four cards at once — your two and the dealer's two. The action buttons (Hit, Stand, Double, Split) are large enough to tap accurately without accidentally selecting the wrong option. For Bangladesh players who primarily use mobile devices, this makes 7000 BDT a comfortable place to play Double Exposure Blackjack on the go.
Play Responsibly: Blackjack is a skill-based game but still involves risk. Set a session budget before you play and use the tools at 7000 BDT to stay in control. Visit our Responsible Gaming page for deposit limits and self-exclusion options.
Register at 7000 BDT, claim your welcome bonus, and start playing Double Exposure Blackjack with both dealer cards face up.
Create Free Account
Everything Bangladesh players ask about Double Exposure Blackjack at 7000 BDT.
Register today, claim your welcome bonus, and sit down at the Double Exposure table where both dealer cards are always face up. Instant bKash deposits and fast withdrawals for Bangladesh players.