- Fancy Serial Numbers Turn Dollar Bills Into Pricey Collectors' Items. 'Ladders': A sequential serial number, like 12345678 or 32109876. Palindromes: Say, 45288254 or 02100120. Collectors call them 'radars.' Repeaters: Blocks of repeating digits, like 85858585, are nice. A perfect sequence like 33333333 is even better, and known as a 'solid.'
- The serial number will be printed in blue as well. If it is a $1, $2 or $5 silver certificate from the series of 1896, the serial number appears in two places: on the upper right and lower left sides of the bill. The Treasury seal, which is printed in red, is in the lower right-hand corner. The serial number is printed in blue.
- Dec 6, 2017 - Liar's Poker is fairly similar to the card game 'cheat.' Players hold random dollar bills with close attention to the serial numbers on their.
- It's also the only hand where the serial number would have to be exact. You find that dollar bill or something in the list back there with 8's and 9's. Then suggest you play the game and everyone pull out a 'random' dollar bill from thier wallet, stick it on there foreheads and then bet on the everyone elses hand being the worst.
- A bill's serial number is just a counter and generally doesn't help to identify it or affect its value. There are collectors who will pay a premium for bills with low or patterned serial numbers; e.g.12345678 or 00000005. Please post a new question with the bill's date, and whether there is a small letter next to the date.
- Star note bills have a serial number that starts with a blue star with a hole in it, followed by eight numbers, then a letter. The certificate – featuring George Washington and a blue seal – looks very similar to the $1 bills seen today. Beneath the 'One Dollar' designation below the portrait of the president is.
Dollar Bill Serial Number Game Free
Nov 24, 2016 - Liar's poker is an American bar game that combines statistical. And is played with the eight digits of the serial numbers on a U.S.
Lower-denomination 'star notes' are usually worth a smallpremium but are not considered to be rarities.
They're bills printed to replace a bill that was damaged duringproduction. The serial number is reused to avoid a gap in theseries, with the asterisk indicating that the bill is areplacement.
Newer star notes are of interest generally only if they're crispand uncirculated, and are usually worth a dollar or two more thanface value. Older (1960s and before) can be worth a bit more thantheir non-starred counterparts even in circulated condition. Also,high-denomination star notes can be worth a significantpremium.
Liar's poker is an American bar game that combines statistical reasoning with bluffing, and is played with the eight digits of the serial number on U.S. dollar bills. The digits are usually ranked with the 1 as 'ace' as the highest value, followed by 0 as '10', down to 2 as the lowest. Each player holds one bill, unseen by the other players. The objective is to guess how often a particular digit appears among all the bills held by all the players. Each guess or bid must be higher in quantity, or equal in quantity but higher in value, than the previous bid. The round ends when all the other players challenge a bid.
Gameplay[edit]
Dollar Bill Serial Number Game 1
Usually the game is played with random bills obtained from the cash register. Each player takes a dollar bill and looks at its serial number without letting any other players see it. The starting player makes an opening bid on how many of a particular digit appears across all serial numbers held by the group. For example, if the first player bids three 6s, he is predicting there are at least three 6s among all the players including himself. The next player can bid a higher number at that level (three 7s), any number at a higher level (four 5s), or challenge the bid. The game continues clockwise around the table until a particular bid is challenged by every other player. If the challenge is correct, and the total number of the digit on all the bills is lower than the bid, the bidder loses a dollar to each of the other players. If the challenge is incorrect, the bidder wins a dollar from each player.
The game is similar in structure to Liar's dice.
In popular culture[edit]
- In the 1965 film Cat Ballou, the sheriff is confronted playing liar's poker at the barn dance.
- In the 1972 film 'The Getaway', Steve McQueen’s character Doc McCoy challenges Ali MacGraw’s character to a game while looking at a bill, by saying 'Five fours'.
- Elliott Gould's and Jim Bouton's characters play a round as friends in the beginning of the 1973 neo noir film, The Long Goodbye.
- In the 1977 movie Semi-Tough, Burt Reynolds' and Jill Clayburgh's characters play an ongoing game of liar's poker periodically throughout the movie.
- Characters on the show Quincy M.E. were often seen playing Liar's poker.
- In the WKRP in Cincinnati episode 'Herb's Dad', Herb's father, and later Herb himself, play liar's poker with Johnny and Venus.
- In Season 3, episode 8 of Magnum, P.I., 'Foiled Again,' Magnum and his two friends pass the time by playing liar's poker.
- In his 1989 book Liar's Poker, Michael Lewis details how Salomon Brothers traders would play liar's poker. He recounts how John Meriwether was once challenged by CEO John Gutfreund to a game of liar's poker for stakes of one million dollars and declined a counter-offer of ten million from Merriwether.
- A game of liar's poker was played in an episode of the TV series Hustle (Season 3, Episode 3) where one of the main characters plays and loses against two merchant bankers.
- In The Wire episode Dead Soldiers, Tommy Carcetti and Anthony Gray play a game.
- In the 2011 movie Hall Pass, the group of characters play a game.
- Anne O Faulk's novel Holding Out uses the game as a plot point.
- In John D. MacDonald's novel, A Tan and Sandy Silence, Travis McGee and Meyer play the game to determine who will pay for dinner and drinks.
Literature[edit]
- Liar's Poker by Michael Lewis.