
TOUR DE NIVEAU PRO INCROYABLE AVEC 6 CARTES (Expliqué)
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This video presents an impossible magic trick using only six cards, no more, no less, involving color transformations and impossible predictions. The magician starts by showing six randomly chosen cards from a deck and asks a spectator to freely select any one of them. For instance, if the spectator chooses a particular card, the magician then reveals the remaining five cards are all blue. The surprising twist is that the spectator, despite having a free choice, somehow picked the only red card in the set.
The trick doesn't end there. The magician then takes the solitary red card and, asking the spectator to now choose a black card (or a card of a different color than their previous choice), the spectator once again makes a free selection. After this second choice, the magician snaps their fingers, and the five blue cards from before miraculously transform into five red cards. Again, the spectator's chosen card turns out to be the only blue card in the set, a truly impossible feat.
Before diving into the explanation, the magician promotes a new, free training course containing seven professional, easy-to-perform, and impactful magic tricks that cannot be revealed on YouTube due to their quality. This course is available via the first link in the description, requiring only an email address, and delivers a new, impactful trick daily for seven days.
For the explanation of the trick, you will need a blue deck and a red deck of cards. From the blue deck, you'll select three black cards, and from the red deck, three red cards. These six cards are then arranged: the three red cards are placed on top of the three black cards. When presented to the spectator, you explain that you have six different cards, emphasizing that there's no trickery and the number of cards is exact.
The first subtlety lies in the spectator's initial choice: whether they pick a red or a black card. If the spectator chooses a red card, regardless of which one, you'll be in a favorable position. When you close the cards, the chosen red card will be prominently red, and when you turn the deck over, you'll naturally see blue cards, for which a specific technique will be demonstrated to show only blue cards.
If the spectator chooses a black card, the setup is slightly less ideal but easily rectifiable. When they pick a black card, you close the cards and tell them they chose that specific card from all the options. At this point, you secretly reverse the order of the cards. If you were to turn the cards over immediately, you'd see blue, which isn't what you want. So, as you close the cards, you reverse them, stating that their choice was completely random. This manipulation ensures that when you turn the cards over, you're looking at red cards. This leaves you with three red cards and two blue cards.
The challenge then becomes how to display only red cards, regardless of whether you have three red and two blue, or three blue and two red, depending on the spectator's choice. This involves a technical maneuver.
Assuming the spectator has chosen a card and you want to show that all remaining cards are red (even though you actually have three red and two blue cards due to the previous manipulation), you begin by fanning out the first card, showing it as a red card. Immediately, you place this card underneath the deck. Then, using a technique called a "biddle grip," you slide only the top card, counting it as the second red card.
Next, you perform an MSL count. This involves pushing the cards in a specific way to hide the two blue cards. This technique requires practice to master. You count "two," then "three," using the MSL movement to push the cards. When counting "three," you discreetly move the third card to the bottom of the deck, simultaneously using a "pinch" grip with your thumb and index finger to grab three cards: your red card plus the two blue cards hidden underneath. So, you count "three," then "four," and "five."
To recap the MSL count: show the first red card, place it under the deck. Using the biddle grip, slide and count the second red card. Then, perform the MSL count, moving the card under the deck, and with the pinch grip, count the third red card, followed by four and five.
Once this is done, you ask the spectator to turn over their chosen card. To their astonishment, it's a blue card, highlighting the impossibility of their choice among six cards, where they picked the only blue one.
To make the trick even more impossible, you repeat the process. You re-arrange the cards, asking the spectator to choose again, but this time, if they chose a black card before, you ask them to choose a red one, or vice-versa. You state that you still have six cards. The spectator makes another selection.
Then, you reveal that the five cards you showed as red earlier have now automatically transformed into five blue cards (or vice-versa, depending on the initial transformation). You perform the exact same MSL counting technique. You have three blue cards and two red cards. You show the first blue card, place it under, slide and count the second blue card, perform the MSL, place it under, pinch and count the third blue card, followed by four and five. Finally, you ask the spectator to look at their chosen card, which is now the only red card in the set.
This trick is somewhat complex, combining the MSL count with other techniques, placing it beyond a beginner level. However, with 20-30 minutes of practice, it can be mastered. For those with the "Magic Pack," the MSL count is explained in detail in the "Magic Expert" module. For those without the Magic Pack, a link in the description provides access to over 100 magic tricks and techniques, representing over 20 years of magical experience compiled into 10 hours of training, featuring the magician's favorite tricks that can't be shared on YouTube.