green roulette


green roulette

green roulette


Casino game of chance

This article is about the casino game. For other uses, see

Roulette (disambiguation)

Roulette ball

"Gwendolen at the roulette πŸŒ› table" – 1910

illustration to George Eliot's Daniel Deronda

Roulette (named after the French word

meaning "little wheel") is a casino πŸŒ› game which was likely developed from the Italian

game Biribi. In the game, a player may choose to place a πŸŒ› bet on a single number,

various groupings of numbers, the color red or black, whether the number is odd or

πŸŒ› even, or if the numbers are high (19–36) or low (1–18).

To determine the winning

number, a croupier spins a wheel πŸŒ› in one direction, then spins a ball in the opposite

direction around a tilted circular track running around the outer πŸŒ› edge of the wheel.

The ball eventually loses momentum, passes through an area of deflectors, and falls

onto the wheel πŸŒ› and into one of thirty-seven (single-zero, French or European style

roulette) or thirty-eight (double-zero, American style roulette) or thirty-nine

(triple-zero, πŸŒ› "Sands Roulette")[1] colored and numbered pockets on the wheel. The

winnings are then paid to anyone who has placed a πŸŒ› successful bet.

History [ edit

]

18th-century E.O. wheel with gamblers

The first form of roulette was devised in

18th-century France. Many historians πŸŒ› believe Blaise Pascal introduced a primitive form

of roulette in the 17th century in his search for a perpetual motion πŸŒ› machine. [2] The

roulette mechanism is a hybrid of a gaming wheel invented in 1720 and the Italian game

Biribi.[3] πŸŒ› A primitive form of roulette, known as 'EO' (Even/Odd), was played in

England in the late 18th century using a πŸŒ› gaming wheel similar to that used in

roulette.[4]

The game has been played in its present form since as early as πŸŒ› 1796 in

Paris. An early description of the roulette game in its current form is found in a

French novel πŸŒ› La Roulette, ou le Jour by Jaques Lablee, which describes a roulette wheel

in the Palais Royal in Paris in πŸŒ› 1796. The description included the house pockets:

"There are exactly two slots reserved for the bank, whence it derives its πŸŒ› sole

mathematical advantage." It then goes on to describe the layout with "two betting

spaces containing the bank's two numbers, πŸŒ› zero and double zero". The book was published

in 1801. An even earlier reference to a game of this name πŸŒ› was published in regulations

for New France (QuΓ©bec) in 1758, which banned the games of "dice, hoca, faro, and

roulette".[5]

The πŸŒ› roulette wheels used in the casinos of Paris in the late 1790s had

red for the single zero and black πŸŒ› for the double zero. To avoid confusion, the color

green was selected for the zeros in roulette wheels starting in πŸŒ› the 1800s.

In 1843, in

the German spa casino town of Bad Homburg, fellow Frenchmen François and Louis Blanc

introduced the πŸŒ› single 0 style roulette wheel in order to compete against other casinos

offering the traditional wheel with single and double πŸŒ› zero house pockets.[6]

In some

forms of early American roulette wheels, there were numbers 1 to 28, plus a single

zero, πŸŒ› a double zero, and an American Eagle. The Eagle slot, which was a symbol of

American liberty, was a house πŸŒ› slot that brought the casino an extra edge. Soon, the

tradition vanished and since then the wheel features only numbered πŸŒ› slots. According to

Hoyle "the single 0, the double 0, and the eagle are never bars; but when the ball

πŸŒ› falls into either of them, the banker sweeps every thing upon the table, except what

may happen to be bet πŸŒ› on either one of them, when he pays twenty-seven for one, which is

the amount paid for all sums bet πŸŒ› upon any single figure".[7]

1800s engraving of the

French roulette

In the 19th century, roulette spread all over Europe and the US,

πŸŒ› becoming one of the most famous and most popular casino games. When the German

government abolished gambling in the 1860s, πŸŒ› the Blanc family moved to the last legal

remaining casino operation in Europe at Monte Carlo, where they established a πŸŒ› gambling

mecca for the elite of Europe. It was here that the single zero roulette wheel became

the premier game, πŸŒ› and over the years was exported around the world, except in the

United States where the double zero wheel remained πŸŒ› dominant.

Early American West

makeshift game

In the United States, the French double zero wheel made its way up the

Mississippi from πŸŒ› New Orleans, and then westward. It was here, because of rampant

cheating by both operators and gamblers, that the wheel πŸŒ› was eventually placed on top of

the table to prevent devices from being hidden in the table or wheel, and πŸŒ› the betting

layout was simplified. This eventually evolved into the American-style roulette game.

The American game was developed in the πŸŒ› gambling dens across the new territories where

makeshift games had been set up, whereas the French game evolved with style πŸŒ› and leisure

in Monte Carlo.

During the first part of the 20th century, the only casino towns of

note were Monte πŸŒ› Carlo with the traditional single zero French wheel, and Las Vegas with

the American double zero wheel. In the 1970s, πŸŒ› casinos began to flourish around the

world. In 1996 the first online casino, generally believed to be InterCasino, made it

πŸŒ› possible to play roulette online.[8] By 2008, there were several hundred casinos

worldwide offering roulette games. The double zero wheel πŸŒ› is found in the U.S., Canada,

South America, and the Caribbean, while the single zero wheel is predominant

elsewhere.

The sum πŸŒ› of all the numbers on the roulette wheel (from 0 to 36) is 666,

which is the "Number of the πŸŒ› Beast".[9]

Rules of play against a casino [ edit ]

Roulette

with red 12 as the winner

Roulette players have a variety of πŸŒ› betting options. "Inside"

bets involve selecting either the exact number on which the ball will land, or a small

group πŸŒ› of numbers adjacent to each other on the layout. "Outside" bets, by contrast,

allow players to select a larger group πŸŒ› of numbers based on properties such as their

color or parity (odd/even). The payout odds for each type of bet πŸŒ› are based on its

probability.

The roulette table usually imposes minimum and maximum bets, and these

rules usually apply separately for πŸŒ› all of a player's inside and outside bets for each

spin. For inside bets at roulette tables, some casinos may πŸŒ› use separate roulette table

chips of various colors to distinguish players at the table. Players can continue to

place bets πŸŒ› as the ball spins around the wheel until the dealer announces "no more bets"

or "rien ne va plus".

Croupier's rake πŸŒ› pushing chips across a roulette layout

When a

winning number and color is determined by the roulette wheel, the dealer will πŸŒ› place a

marker, also known as a dolly, on that number on the roulette table layout. When the

dolly is πŸŒ› on the table, no players may place bets, collect bets or remove any bets from

the table. The dealer will πŸŒ› then sweep away all losing bets either by hand or by rake,

and determine the payouts for the remaining inside πŸŒ› and outside winning bets. When the

dealer is finished making payouts, the dolly is removed from the board and players πŸŒ› may

collect their winnings and make new bets. Winning chips remain on the board until

picked up by a player.

California πŸŒ› Roulette [ edit ]

In 2004, California legalized a

form of roulette known as California Roulette.[10] By law, the game must πŸŒ› use cards and

not slots on the roulette wheel to pick the winning number.

Roulette wheel number

sequence [ edit ]

The πŸŒ› pockets of the roulette wheel are numbered from 0 to 36.

In

number ranges from 1 to 10 and 19 to πŸŒ› 28, odd numbers are red and even are black. In

ranges from 11 to 18 and 29 to 36, odd πŸŒ› numbers are black and even are red.

There is a

green pocket numbered 0 (zero). In American roulette, there is a πŸŒ› second green pocket

marked 00. Pocket number order on the roulette wheel adheres to the following clockwise

sequence in most πŸŒ› casinos:[citation needed]

Single-zero wheel

0-32-15-19-4-21-2-25-17-34-6-27-13-36-11-30-8-23-10-5-24-16-33-1-20-14-31-9-22-18-29-7-

28-12-35-3-26 Double-zero wheel

0-28-9-26-30-11-7-20-32-17-5-22-34-15-3-24-36-13-1-00-27-10-25-29-12-8-19-31-18-6-21-33

-16-4-23-35-14-2 Triple-zero wheel

0-000-00-32-15-19-4-21-2-25-17-34-6-27-13-36-11-30-8-23-10-5-24-16-33-1-20-14-31-9-22-1

8-29-7-28-12-35-3-26

Roulette table layout [ edit ]

French style layout, French single

zero πŸŒ› wheel

The cloth-covered betting area on a roulette table is known as the layout.

The layout is either single-zero or double-zero.

The πŸŒ› European-style layout has a single

zero, and the American style layout is usually a double-zero. The American-style

roulette table with πŸŒ› a wheel at one end is now used in most casinos because it has a

higher house edge compared to πŸŒ› a European layout.[11]

The French style table with a

wheel in the centre and a layout on either side is rarely πŸŒ› found outside of Monte

Carlo.

Types of bets [ edit ]

In roulette, bets can be either inside or

outside.[12]

Inside bets [ πŸŒ› edit ]

Name Description Chip placement Straight/Single Bet

on a single number Entirely within the square for the chosen number Split πŸŒ› Bet on two

vertically/horizontally adjacent numbers (e.g. 14-17 or 8–9) On the edge shared by the

numbers Street Bet on πŸŒ› three consecutive numbers in a horizontal line (e.g. 7-8-9) On

the outer edge of the number at either end of πŸŒ› the line Corner/Square Bet on four

numbers that meet at one corner (e.g. 10-11-13-14) On the common corner Six Line/Double

πŸŒ› Street Bet on six consecutive numbers that form two horizontal lines (e.g.

31-32-33-34-35-36) On the outer corner shared by the πŸŒ› two leftmost or the two rightmost

numbers Trio/Basket A three-number bet that involves at least one zero: 0-1-2 (either

layout); πŸŒ› 0-2-3 (single-zero only); 0-00-2 and 00-2-3 (double-zero only) On the corner

shared by the three chosen numbers First Four Bet πŸŒ› on 0-1-2-3 (Single-zero layout only)

On the outer corner shared by 0-1 or 0-3 Top Line Bet on 0-00-1-2-3 (Double-zero πŸŒ› layout

only) On the outer corner shared by 0-1 or 00-3

Outside bets [ edit ]

Outside bets

typically have smaller payouts πŸŒ› with better odds at winning. Except as noted, all of

these bets lose if a zero comes up.

1 to 18 πŸŒ› (Low or Manque), or 19 to 36 (High or

Passe) A bet that the number will be in the chosen πŸŒ› range. Red or black (Rouge ou Noir)

A bet that the number will be the chosen color. Even or odd πŸŒ› (Pair ou Impair) A bet that

the number will be of the chosen type. Dozen bet A bet that the πŸŒ› number will be in the

chosen dozen: first (1-12, Première douzaine or P12), second (13-24, Moyenne douzaine

or M12), or πŸŒ› third (25-36, DerniΓ¨re douzaine or D12). Column bet A bet that the number

will be in the chosen vertical column πŸŒ› of 12 numbers, such as 1-4-7-10 on down to 34.

The chip is placed on the space below the final πŸŒ› number in this sequence. Snake Bet A

special bet that covers the numbers 1, 5, 9, 12, 14, 16, 19, πŸŒ› 23, 27, 30, 32, and 34. It

has the same payout as the dozen bet and takes its name from πŸŒ› the zigzagging, snakelike

pattern traced out by these numbers. The snake bet is not available in all casinos;

when it πŸŒ› is allowed, the chip is placed on the lower corner of the 34 square that

borders the 19-36 betting box. πŸŒ› Some layouts mark the bet with a two-headed snake that

winds from 1 to 34, and the bet can be πŸŒ› placed on the head at either end of the body.

In

the United Kingdom, the farthest outside bets (low/high, red/black, even/odd) πŸŒ› result in

the player losing only half of their bet if a zero comes up.

Bet odds table [ edit

]

The πŸŒ› expected value of aR$1 bet (except for the special case of Top line bets), for

American and European roulette, can πŸŒ› be calculated as

e x p e c t e d v a l u e = 1 n (

36 πŸŒ› βˆ’ n ) = 36 n βˆ’ 1 , {\displaystyle \mathrm {expectedvalue} ={\frac

{1}{n}}(36-n)={\frac {36}{n}}-1,}

where n is the number of πŸŒ› pockets in the wheel.

The

initial bet is returned in addition to the mentioned payout: it can be easily

demonstrated that πŸŒ› this payout formula would lead to a zero expected value of profit if

there were only 36 numbers (that is, πŸŒ› the casino would break even). Having 37 or more

numbers gives the casino its edge.

Bet name Winning spaces Payout Odds πŸŒ› against winning

(French) Expected value

(on aR$1 bet) (French) Odds against winning (American) Expected

value

(on aR$1 bet) (American) 0 0 35 πŸŒ› to 1 36 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 37 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 00 00 35 to

1 37 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Straight πŸŒ› up Any single number 35 to 1 36 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 37 to 1 βˆ’$0.053

Row 0, 00 17 to πŸŒ› 1 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Split any two adjoining numbers vertical or

horizontal 17 to 1 17 + 1 ⁄ πŸŒ› 2 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Street any three numbers

horizontal (1, 2, 3 or 4, 5, 6, πŸŒ› etc.) 11 to 1 11 + 1 ⁄ 3 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 11 + 2 ⁄ 3 to 1

βˆ’$0.053 πŸŒ› Corner any four adjoining numbers in a block (1, 2, 4, 5 or 17, 18, 20, 21,

etc.) 8 to πŸŒ› 1 8 + 1 ⁄ 4 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Top line (US) πŸŒ› 0, 00, 1, 2, 3

6 to 1 6 + 3 ⁄ 5 to 1 βˆ’$0.079 Top line (European) 0, πŸŒ› 1, 2, 3 8 to 1 8 + 1 ⁄ 4 to 1

βˆ’$0.027 Double Street any six numbers from πŸŒ› two horizontal rows (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 or 28,

29, 30, 31, 32, 33 etc.) 5 to 1 πŸŒ› 5 + 1 ⁄ 6 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 5 + 1 ⁄ 3 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 1st

column 1, 4, πŸŒ› 7, 10, 13, 16, 19, 22, 25, 28, 31, 34 2 to 1 2 + 1 ⁄ 12 to 1 πŸŒ› βˆ’$0.027 2 + 1

⁄ 6 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 2nd column 2, 5, 8, 11, 14, 17, 20, 23, 26, πŸŒ› 29, 32, 35 2 to 1 2 + 1 ⁄

12 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 2 + 1 ⁄ 6 to πŸŒ› 1 βˆ’$0.053 3rd column 3, 6, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21, 24, 27, 30,

33, 36 2 to 1 2 πŸŒ› + 1 ⁄ 12 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 2 + 1 ⁄ 6 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 1st dozen 1 through 12 πŸŒ› 2

to 1 2 + 1 ⁄ 12 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 2 + 1 ⁄ 6 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 2nd πŸŒ› dozen 13 through 24 2 to 1 2 +

1 ⁄ 12 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 2 + 1 ⁄ 6 πŸŒ› to 1 βˆ’$0.053 3rd dozen 25 through 36 2 to 1 2 + 1 ⁄ 12 to

1 βˆ’$0.027 2 πŸŒ› + 1 ⁄ 6 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Odd 1, 3, 5, ..., 35 1 to 1 1 + 1 ⁄ πŸŒ› 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1

+ 1 ⁄ 9 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Even 2, 4, 6, ..., 36 1 to πŸŒ› 1 1 + 1 ⁄ 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1 + 1 ⁄ 9 to

1 βˆ’$0.053 Red 32, 19, πŸŒ› 21, 25, 34, 27, 36, 30, 23, 5, 16, 1, 14, 9, 18, 7, 12, 3 1 to 1

1 πŸŒ› + 1 ⁄ 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1 + 1 ⁄ 9 to 1 βˆ’$0.053 Black 15, 4, 2, 17, πŸŒ› 6, 13, 11, 8, 10,

24, 33, 20, 31, 22, 29, 28, 35, 26 1 to 1 1 + 1 πŸŒ› ⁄ 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1 + 1 ⁄ 9 to 1

βˆ’$0.053 1 to 18 1, 2, 3, ..., πŸŒ› 18 1 to 1 1 + 1 ⁄ 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1 + 1 ⁄ 9 to 1 βˆ’$0.053

πŸŒ› 19 to 36 19, 20, 21, ..., 36 1 to 1 1 + 1 ⁄ 18 to 1 βˆ’$0.027 1 πŸŒ› + 1 ⁄ 9 to 1 βˆ’$0.053

Top

line (0, 00, 1, 2, 3) has a different expected value because of πŸŒ› approximation of the

correct 6+1⁄5-to-1 payout obtained by the formula to 6-to-1. The values 0 and 00 are

not odd πŸŒ› or even, or high or low.

En prison rules, when used, reduce the house

advantage.

House edge [ edit ]

The house average πŸŒ› or house edge or house advantage (also

called the expected value) is the amount the player loses relative to any πŸŒ› bet made, on

average. If a player bets on a single number in the American game there is a

probability πŸŒ› of 1⁄38 that the player wins 35 times the bet, and a 37⁄38 chance that the

player loses their bet. πŸŒ› The expected value is:

βˆ’1 Γ— 37 ⁄ 38 + 35 Γ— 1 ⁄ 38 = βˆ’0.0526

(5.26% house edge)

For European πŸŒ› roulette, a single number wins 1⁄37 and loses 36⁄37:

βˆ’1

Γ— 36 ⁄ 37 + 35 Γ— 1 ⁄ 37 = πŸŒ› βˆ’0.0270 (2.70% house edge)

For triple-zero wheels, a single

number wins 1⁄39 and loses 38⁄39:

βˆ’1 Γ— 38 ⁄ 39 + 35 πŸŒ› Γ— 1 ⁄ 39 = βˆ’0.0769 (7.69% house

edge)

Mathematical model [ edit ]

As an example, the European roulette model, that πŸŒ› is,

roulette with only one zero, can be examined. Since this roulette has 37 cells with

equal odds of hitting, πŸŒ› this is a final model of field probability ( Ξ© , 2 Ξ© , P )

{\displaystyle (\Omega ,2^{\Omega },\mathbb πŸŒ› {P} )} , where Ξ© = { 0 , … , 36 }

{\displaystyle \Omega =\{0,\ldots ,36\}} , P ( πŸŒ› A ) = | A | 37 {\displaystyle \mathbb

{P} (A)={\frac {|A|}{37}}} for all A ∈ 2 Ξ© {\displaystyle A\in πŸŒ› 2^{\Omega }} .

Call the

bet S {\displaystyle S} a triple ( A , r , ΞΎ ) {\displaystyle (A,r,\xi )} πŸŒ› , where A

{\displaystyle A} is the set of chosen numbers, r ∈ R + {\displaystyle r\in \mathbb {R}

_{+}} πŸŒ› is the size of the bet, and ΞΎ : Ξ© β†’ R {\displaystyle \xi :\Omega \to \mathbb {R}

} determines πŸŒ› the return of the bet.[13]

The rules of European roulette have 10 types of

bets. First the 'Straight Up' bet can πŸŒ› be imagined. In this case, S = ( { Ο‰ 0 } , r , ΞΎ

) {\displaystyle S=(\{\omega _{0}\},r,\xi πŸŒ› )} , for some Ο‰ 0 ∈ Ξ© {\displaystyle \omega

_{0}\in \Omega } , and ΞΎ {\displaystyle \xi } is πŸŒ› determined by

ΞΎ ( Ο‰ ) = { βˆ’ r , Ο‰ β‰  Ο‰

0 35 β‹… r , Ο‰ = πŸŒ› Ο‰ 0 . {\displaystyle \xi (\omega )={\begin{cases}-r,&\omega

eq \omega

_{0}\\35\cdot r,&\omega =\omega _{0}\end{cases}}.}

The bet's expected net return, or

profitability, is equal πŸŒ› to

M [ ΞΎ ] = 1 37 βˆ‘ Ο‰ ∈ Ξ© ΞΎ ( Ο‰ ) = 1 37 ( ΞΎ πŸŒ› ( Ο‰ 0 ) + βˆ‘ Ο‰ β‰  Ο‰

0 ΞΎ ( Ο‰ ) ) = 1 37 ( 35 πŸŒ› β‹… r βˆ’ 36 β‹… r ) = βˆ’ r 37 β‰ˆ βˆ’ 0.027 r . {\displaystyle M[\xi

]={\frac {1}{37}}\sum πŸŒ› _{\omega \in \Omega }\xi (\omega )={\frac {1}{37}}\left(\xi

(\omega _{0})+\sum _{\omega

eq \omega _{0}}\xi (\omega )\right)={\frac

{1}{37}}\left(35\cdot r-36\cdot r\right)=-{\frac {r}{37}}\approx -0.027r.}

Without

details, πŸŒ› for a bet, black (or red), the rule is determined as

ΞΎ ( Ο‰ ) = { βˆ’ r , Ο‰ πŸŒ› is

red βˆ’ r , Ο‰ = 0 r , Ο‰ is black , {\displaystyle \xi (\omega )={\begin{cases}-r,&\omega

{\text{ is πŸŒ› red}}\\-r,&\omega =0\\r,&\omega {\text{ is black}}\end{cases}},}

and the

profitability

M [ ΞΎ ] = 1 37 ( 18 β‹… r βˆ’ 18 β‹… πŸŒ› r βˆ’ r ) = βˆ’ r 37 {\displaystyle M[\xi

]={\frac {1}{37}}(18\cdot r-18\cdot r-r)=-{\frac {r}{37}}}

For similar reasons it is

simple πŸŒ› to see that the profitability is also equal for all remaining types of bets. βˆ’ r

37 {\displaystyle -{\frac {r}{37}}} πŸŒ› .[14]

In reality this means that, the more bets a

player makes, the more they are going to lose independent of πŸŒ› the strategies

(combinations of bet types or size of bets) that they employ:

βˆ‘ n = 1 ∞ M [ ΞΎ πŸŒ› n ] = βˆ’ 1

37 βˆ‘ n = 1 ∞ r n β†’ βˆ’ ∞ . {\displaystyle \sum _{n=1}^{\infty πŸŒ› }M[\xi _{n}]=-{\frac

{1}{37}}\sum _{n=1}^{\infty }r_{n}\to -\infty .}

Here, the profit margin for the

roulette owner is equal to approximately 2.7%. Nevertheless, πŸŒ› several roulette strategy

systems have been developed despite the losing odds. These systems can not change the

odds of the πŸŒ› game in favor of the player.

It is worth noting that the odds for the

player in American roulette are even πŸŒ› worse, as the bet profitability is at worst βˆ’ 3 38

r β‰ˆ βˆ’ 0.0789 r {\displaystyle -{\frac {3}{38}}r\approx -0.0789r} πŸŒ› , and never better

than βˆ’ r 19 β‰ˆ βˆ’ 0.0526 r {\displaystyle -{\frac {r}{19}}\approx -0.0526r} .

Simplified

mathematical model [ πŸŒ› edit ]

For a roulette wheel with n {\displaystyle n} green numbers

and 36 other unique numbers, the chance of the πŸŒ› ball landing on a given number is 1 ( 36

+ n ) {\displaystyle {\frac {1}{(36+n)}}} . For a betting πŸŒ› option with p {\displaystyle

p} numbers defining a win, the chance of winning a bet is p ( 36 + πŸŒ› n ) {\displaystyle

{\frac {p}{(36+n)}}}

For example, if a player bets on red, there are 18 red numbers, p

= 18 πŸŒ› {\displaystyle p=18} , so the chance of winning is 18 ( 36 + n ) {\displaystyle

{\frac {18}{(36+n)}}} .

The payout πŸŒ› given by the casino for a win is based on the

roulette wheel having 36 outcomes, and the payout for πŸŒ› a bet is given by 36 p

{\displaystyle {\frac {36}{p}}} .

For example, betting on 1-12 there are 12 numbers

that πŸŒ› define a win, p = 12 {\displaystyle p=12} , the payout is 36 12 = 3 {\displaystyle

{\frac {36}{12}}=3} , πŸŒ› so the bettor wins 3 times their bet.

The average return on a

player's bet is given by p ( 36 πŸŒ› + n ) Γ— 36 p = 36 ( 36 + n ) {\displaystyle {\frac

{p}{(36+n)}}\times {\frac {36}{p}}={\frac {36}{(36+n)}}}

For n πŸŒ› > 0 {\displaystyle n>0}

, the average return is always lower than 1, so on average a player will lose

πŸŒ› money.

With 1 green number, n = 1 {\displaystyle n=1} , the average return is 36 37

{\displaystyle {\frac {36}{37}}} , πŸŒ› that is, after a bet the player will on average have

36 37 {\displaystyle {\frac {36}{37}}} of their original bet πŸŒ› returned to them. With 2

green numbers, n = 2 {\displaystyle n=2} , the average return is 36 38 {\displaystyle

πŸŒ› {\frac {36}{38}}} . With 3 green numbers, n = 3 {\displaystyle n=3} , the average

return is 36 39 {\displaystyle πŸŒ› {\frac {36}{39}}} .

This shows that the expected return

is independent of the choice of bet.

Mechanics [ edit ]

All roulette tables πŸŒ› deal with

only four elements:

1. The roulette wheel.

2. The roulette table (aka layout).

3. The

ball. These days the ball is πŸŒ› most likely high impact plastic, but originally it was

made of ivory. Modern casinos maintain the integrity of their roulette πŸŒ› balls with

regular magnetic and x-ray exams.

4. The chips. Some casinos allow the player to use

generic casino chips at πŸŒ› the roulette tables, but most require the player to buy in at

the table. The croupier has stacks of various πŸŒ› colored chips. Usually each player gets a

different color to help avoid confusion of bets, and the player can designate πŸŒ› the value

of the chip. The chips are typically valued at eitherR$1 or the table minimum; if the

player wishes, πŸŒ› the chips may be worthR$0.25 so long as the "total" wager meets the

table minimums for their respective sectors, for πŸŒ› example by placing fourR$0.25 bets to

meet aR$1 table minimum.

All roulette tables operated by a casino have the same basic

πŸŒ› mechanics:

There is a balanced mechanical wheel with colored pockets separated by

identical vanes and the wheel which spins freely on πŸŒ› a supporting post.

The wheel is

held within a wooden frame which contains a track around the upper outer edge and

πŸŒ› blocks of a variety of designs placed approximately halfway down the face of the

frame.

A plastic or ivory ball is πŸŒ› spun in the track in the frame that holds the wheel.

As the ball loses momentum the centrifugal force is πŸŒ› no longer sufficient to hold the

ball in the groove and it falls down the face of the frame. As πŸŒ› the ball hits a block

its trajectory is randomly altered on all 3 planes (X, Y, and Z) causing the πŸŒ› ball to

bounce and skip.

The ball falls onto the spinning wheel and eventually lands into one

of the pockets.

The number πŸŒ› of the pocket the ball falls into determines how the bets

placed on the layout table are treated.

After this the πŸŒ› specifics of individual tables

can vary greatly.[15]

Called (or call) bets or announced bets [ edit ]

Traditional

roulette wheel sectors

Although most πŸŒ› often named "call bets" technically these bets are

more accurately referred to as "announced bets". The legal distinction between a πŸŒ› "call

bet" and an "announced bet" is that a "call bet" is a bet called by the player without

placing πŸŒ› any money on the table to cover the cost of the bet. In many jurisdictions

(most notably the United Kingdom) πŸŒ› this is considered gambling on credit and is illegal.

An "announced bet" is a bet called by the player for πŸŒ› which they immediately place

enough money to cover the amount of the bet on the table, prior to the outcome πŸŒ› of the

spin or hand in progress being known.

There are different number series in roulette

that have special names attached πŸŒ› to them. Most commonly these bets are known as "the

French bets" and each covers a section of the wheel. πŸŒ› For the sake of accuracy, zero

spiel, although explained below, is not a French bet, it is more accurately "the πŸŒ› German

bet". Players at a table may bet a set amount per series (or multiples of that amount).

The series πŸŒ› are based on the way certain numbers lie next to each other on the roulette

wheel. Not all casinos offer πŸŒ› these bets, and some may offer additional bets or

variations on these.

Voisins du zΓ©ro (neighbors of zero) [ edit ]

This πŸŒ› is a name, more

accurately "grands voisins du zΓ©ro", for the 17 numbers that lie between 22 and 25 on

πŸŒ› the wheel, including 22 and 25 themselves. The series is

22-18-29-7-28-12-35-3-26-0-32-15-19-4-21-2-25 (on a single-zero wheel).

Nine chips or

multiples thereof are πŸŒ› bet. Two chips are placed on the 0-2-3 trio; one on the 4–7

split; one on 12–15; one on 18–21; πŸŒ› one on 19–22; two on the 25-26-28-29 corner; and one

on 32–35.

Jeu zΓ©ro (zero game) [ edit ]

Zero game, also πŸŒ› known as zero spiel (Spiel is

German for game or play), is the name for the numbers closest to zero. πŸŒ› All numbers in

the zero game are included in the voisins, but are placed differently. The numbers bet

on are πŸŒ› 12-35-3-26-0-32-15.

The bet consists of four chips or multiples thereof. Three

chips are bet on splits and one chip straight-up: one πŸŒ› chip on 0–3 split, one on 12–15

split, one on 32–35 split and one straight-up on number 26.

This type of πŸŒ› bet is popular

in Germany and many European casinos. It is also offered as a 5-chip bet in many

Eastern πŸŒ› European casinos. As a 5-chip bet, it is known as "zero spiel naca" and

includes, in addition to the chips πŸŒ› placed as noted above, a straight-up on number

19.

Le tiers du cylindre (third of the wheel) [ edit ]

This is πŸŒ› the name for the 12

numbers that lie on the opposite side of the wheel between 27 and 33, including πŸŒ› 27 and

33 themselves. On a single-zero wheel, the series is 27-13-36-11-30-8-23-10-5-24-16-33.

The full name (although very rarely used, most πŸŒ› players refer to it as "tiers") for this

bet is "le tiers du cylindre" (translated from French into English meaning πŸŒ› one third of

the wheel) because it covers 12 numbers (placed as 6 splits), which is as close to 1⁄3

πŸŒ› of the wheel as one can get.

Very popular in British casinos, tiers bets outnumber

voisins and orphelins bets by a πŸŒ› massive margin.

Six chips or multiples thereof are bet.

One chip is placed on each of the following splits: 5–8, 10–11, πŸŒ› 13–16, 23–24, 27–30,

and 33–36.

The tiers bet is also called the "small series" and in some casinos (most

notably in πŸŒ› South Africa) "series 5-8".

A variant known as "tiers 5-8-10-11" has an

additional chip placed straight up on 5, 8, 10, πŸŒ› and 11m and so is a 10-piece bet. In

some places the variant is called "gioco Ferrari" with a straight πŸŒ› up on 8, 11, 23 and

30, the bet is marked with a red G on the racetrack.

Orphelins (orphans) [ πŸŒ› edit ]

These

numbers make up the two slices of the wheel outside the tiers and voisins. They contain

a total πŸŒ› of 8 numbers, comprising 17-34-6 and 1-20-14-31-9.

Five chips or multiples

thereof are bet on four splits and a straight-up: one πŸŒ› chip is placed straight-up on 1

and one chip on each of the splits: 6–9, 14–17, 17–20, and 31–34.

... and πŸŒ› the neighbors

[ edit ]

A number may be backed along with the two numbers on the either side of it πŸŒ› in

a 5-chip bet. For example, "0 and the neighbors" is a 5-chip bet with one piece

straight-up on 3, πŸŒ› 26, 0, 32, and 15. Neighbors bets are often put on in combinations,

for example "1, 9, 14, and the πŸŒ› neighbors" is a 15-chip bet covering 18, 22, 33, 16 with

one chip, 9, 31, 20, 1 with two chips πŸŒ› and 14 with three chips.

Any of the above bets

may be combined, e.g. "orphelins by 1 and zero and the πŸŒ› neighbors by 1". The "...and the

neighbors" is often assumed by the croupier.

Final bets [ edit ]

Another bet offered on

πŸŒ› the single-zero game is "final", "finale" or "finals".

Final 4, for example, is a

4-chip bet and consists of one chip πŸŒ› placed on each of the numbers ending in 4, that is

4, 14, 24, and 34. Final 7 is a πŸŒ› 3-chip bet, one chip each on 7, 17, and 27. Final bets

from final 0 (zero) to final 6 cost πŸŒ› four chips. Final bets 7, 8 and 9 cost three

chips.

Some casinos also offer split-final bets, for example final 5-8 πŸŒ› would be a

4-chip bet, one chip each on the splits 5–8, 15–18, 25–28, and one on 35.

Full

completes/maximums [ πŸŒ› edit ]

A complete bet places all of the inside bets on a certain

number. Full complete bets are most often πŸŒ› bet by high rollers as maximum bets.

The

maximum amount allowed to be wagered on a single bet in European roulette πŸŒ› is based on a

progressive betting model. If the casino allows a maximum bet ofR$1,000 on a 35-to-1

straight-up, then πŸŒ› on each 17-to-1 split connected to that straight-up,R$2,000 may be

wagered. Each 8-to-1 corner that covers four numbers) may haveR$4,000 πŸŒ› wagered on it.

Each 11-to-1 street that covers three numbers may haveR$3,000 wagered on it. Each

5-to-1 six-line may haveR$6,000 πŸŒ› wagered on it. EachR$1,000 incremental bet would be

represented by a marker that is used to specifically identify the player πŸŒ› and the amount

bet.

For instance, if a patron wished to place a full complete bet on 17, the player

would πŸŒ› call "17 to the maximum". This bet would require a total of 40 chips, orR$40,000.

To manually place the same πŸŒ› wager, the player would need to bet:

17 to the maximum Bet

type Number(s) bet on Chips Amount waged Straight-up 17 πŸŒ› 1R$1,000 Split 14-17 2R$2,000

Split 16-17 2R$2,000 Split 17-18 2R$2,000 Split 17-20 2R$2,000 Street 16-17-18 3R$3,000

Corner 13-14-16-17 4R$4,000 Corner πŸŒ› 14-15-17-18 4R$4,000 Corner 16-17-19-20 4R$4,000

Corner 17-18-20-21 4R$4,000 Six line 13-14-15-16-17-18 6R$6,000 Six line

16-17-18-19-20-21 6R$6,000 Total 40R$40,000

The player calls πŸŒ› their bet to the croupier

(most often after the ball has been spun) and places enough chips to cover the πŸŒ› bet on

the table within reach of the croupier. The croupier will immediately announce the bet

(repeat what the player πŸŒ› has just said), ensure that the correct monetary amount has

been given while simultaneously placing a matching marker on the πŸŒ› number on the table

and the amount wagered.

The payout for this bet if the chosen number wins is 392 chips,

πŸŒ› in the case of aR$1000 straight-up maximum,R$40,000 bet, a payout ofR$392,000. The

player's wagered 40 chips, as with all winning πŸŒ› bets in roulette, are still their

property and in the absence of a request to the contrary are left up πŸŒ› to possibly win

again on the next spin.

Based on the location of the numbers on the layout, the number

of πŸŒ› chips required to "complete" a number can be determined.

Zero costs 17 chips to

complete and pays 235 chips.

Number 1 and πŸŒ› number 3 each cost 27 chips and pay 297

chips.

Number 2 is a 36-chip bet and pays 396 chips.

1st column πŸŒ› numbers 4 to 31 and 3rd

column numbers 6 to 33, cost 30 chips each to complete. The payout for πŸŒ› a win on these

30-chip bets is 294 chips.

2nd column numbers 5 to 32 cost 40 chips each to complete.

πŸŒ› The payout for a win on these numbers is 392 chips.

Numbers 34 and 36 each cost 18

chips and pay πŸŒ› 198 chips.

Number 35 is a 24-chip bet which pays 264 chips.

Most

typically (Mayfair casinos in London and other top-class European πŸŒ› casinos) with these

maximum or full complete bets, nothing (except the aforementioned maximum button) is

ever placed on the layout πŸŒ› even in the case of a win. Experienced gaming staff, and the

type of customers playing such bets, are fully πŸŒ› aware of the payouts and so the croupier

simply makes up the correct payout, announces its value to the table πŸŒ› inspector (floor

person in the U.S.) and the customer, and then passes it to the customer, but only

after a πŸŒ› verbal authorization from the inspector has been received.

Also typically at

this level of play (house rules allowing) the experienced croupier πŸŒ› caters to the needs

of the customer and will most often add the customer's winning bet to the payout, as

πŸŒ› the type of player playing these bets very rarely bets the same number two spins in

succession. For example, the πŸŒ› winning 40-chip /R$40,000 bet on "17 to the maximum" pays

392 chips /R$392,000. The experienced croupier would pay the player πŸŒ› 432 chips

/R$432,000, that is 392 + 40, with the announcement that the payout "is with your bet

down".

There are πŸŒ› also several methods to determine the payout when a number adjacent to

a chosen number is the winner, for example, πŸŒ› player bets 40 chips on "23 to the maximum"

and number 26 is the winning number. The most notable method πŸŒ› is known as the "station"

system or method. When paying in stations, the dealer counts the number of ways or

πŸŒ› stations that the winning number hits the complete bet. In the example above, 26 hits 4

stations - 2 different πŸŒ› corners, 1 split and 1 six-line. The dealer takes the number 4,

multiplies it by 30 and adds the remaining πŸŒ› 8 to the payout: 4 Γ— 30 = 120, 120 + 8 =

128. If calculated as stations, they would πŸŒ› just multiply 4 by 36, making 144 with the

players bet down.

In some casinos, a player may bet full complete πŸŒ› for less than the

table straight-up maximum, for example, "number 17 full complete byR$25" would

costR$1000, that is 40 chips πŸŒ› each atR$25 value.

Betting strategies and tactics [ edit

]

Over the years, many people have tried to beat the casino, and πŸŒ› turn rouletteβ€”a game

designed to turn a profit for the houseβ€”into one on which the player expects to win.

Most πŸŒ› of the time this comes down to the use of betting systems, strategies which say

that the house edge can πŸŒ› be beaten by simply employing a special pattern of bets, often

relying on the "Gambler's fallacy", the idea that past πŸŒ› results are any guide to the

future (for example, if a roulette wheel has come up 10 times in a πŸŒ› row on red, that red

on the next spin is any more or less likely than if the last spin πŸŒ› was black).

All

betting systems that rely on patterns, when employed on casino edge games will result,

on average, in the πŸŒ› player losing money.[16] In practice, players employing betting

systems may win, and may indeed win very large sums of money, πŸŒ› but the losses (which,

depending on the design of the betting system, may occur quite rarely) will outweigh

the wins. πŸŒ› Certain systems, such as the Martingale, described below, are extremely

risky, because the worst-case scenario (which is mathematically certain to πŸŒ› happen, at

some point) may see the player chasing losses with ever-bigger bets until they run out

of money.

The American πŸŒ› mathematician Patrick Billingsley said[17][unreliable source?]

that no betting system can convert a subfair game into a profitable enterprise. At

least πŸŒ› in the 1930s, some professional gamblers were able to consistently gain an edge

in roulette by seeking out rigged wheels πŸŒ› (not difficult to find at that time) and

betting opposite the largest bets.

Prediction methods [ edit ]

Whereas betting systems

are πŸŒ› essentially an attempt to beat the fact that a geometric series with initial value

of 0.95 (American roulette) or 0.97 πŸŒ› (European roulette) will inevitably over time tend

to zero, engineers instead attempt to overcome the house edge through predicting the

πŸŒ› mechanical performance of the wheel, most notably by Joseph Jagger at Monte Carlo in

1873. These schemes work by determining πŸŒ› that the ball is more likely to fall at certain

numbers. If effective, they raise the return of the game πŸŒ› above 100%, defeating the

betting system problem.

Edward O. Thorp (the developer of card counting and an early

hedge-fund pioneer) and πŸŒ› Claude Shannon (a mathematician and electronic engineer best

known for his contributions to information theory) built the first wearable computer πŸŒ› to

predict the landing of the ball in 1961. This system worked by timing the ball and

wheel, and using πŸŒ› the information obtained to calculate the most likely octant where the

ball would fall. Ironically, this technique works best with πŸŒ› an unbiased wheel though it

could still be countered quite easily by simply closing the table for betting before

beginning πŸŒ› the spin.

In 1982, several casinos in Britain began to lose large sums of

money at their roulette tables to teams πŸŒ› of gamblers from the US. Upon investigation by

the police, it was discovered they were using a legal system of πŸŒ› biased wheel-section

betting. As a result of this, the British roulette wheel manufacturer John Huxley

manufactured a roulette wheel to πŸŒ› counteract the problem.

The new wheel, designed by

George Melas, was called "low profile" because the pockets had been drastically reduced

πŸŒ› in depth, and various other design modifications caused the ball to descend in a

gradual approach to the pocket area. πŸŒ› In 1986, when a professional gambling team headed

by Billy Walters wonR$3.8 million using the system on an old wheel πŸŒ› at the Golden Nugget

in Atlantic City, every casino in the world took notice, and within one year had

switched πŸŒ› to the new low-profile wheel.

Thomas Bass, in his book The Eudaemonic Pie

(1985) (published as The Newtonian Casino in Britain), πŸŒ› has claimed to be able to

predict wheel performance in real time. The book describes the exploits of a group πŸŒ› of

University of California Santa Cruz students, who called themselves the Eudaemons, who

in the late 1970s used computers in πŸŒ› their shoes to win at roulette. This is an updated

and improved version of Edward O. Thorp's approach, where Newtonian πŸŒ› Laws of Motion are

applied to track the roulette ball's deceleration; hence the British title.

In the

early 1990s, Gonzalo Garcia-Pelayo πŸŒ› believed that casino roulette wheels were not

perfectly random, and that by recording the results and analysing them with a πŸŒ› computer,

he could gain an edge on the house by predicting that certain numbers were more likely

to occur next πŸŒ› than the 1-in-36 odds offered by the house suggested. He did this at the

Casino de Madrid in Madrid, Spain, πŸŒ› winning 600,000 euros in a single day, and one

million euros in total. Legal action against him by the casino πŸŒ› was unsuccessful, being

ruled that the casino should fix its wheel.[18][19]

To defend against exploits like

these, many casinos use tracking πŸŒ› software, use wheels with new designs, rotate wheel

heads, and randomly rotate pocket rings.[20]

At the Ritz London casino in March πŸŒ› 2004,

two Serbs and a Hungarian used a laser scanner hidden inside a mobile phone linked to a

computer to πŸŒ› predict the sector of the wheel where the ball was most likely to drop.

They netted Β£1.3m in two nights.[21] πŸŒ› They were arrested and kept on police bail for

nine months, but eventually released and allowed to keep their winnings πŸŒ› as they had not

interfered with the casino equipment.[22]

Specific betting systems [ edit ]

The

numerous even-money bets in roulette have πŸŒ› inspired many players over the years to

attempt to beat the game by using one or more variations of a πŸŒ› martingale betting

strategy, wherein the gambler doubles the bet after every loss, so that the first win

would recover all πŸŒ› previous losses, plus win a profit equal to the original bet. The

problem with this strategy is that, remembering that πŸŒ› past results do not affect the

future, it is possible for the player to lose so many times in a πŸŒ› row, that the player,

doubling and redoubling their bets, either runs out of money or hits the table limit. A

πŸŒ› large financial loss is certain in the long term if the player continued to employ this

strategy. Another strategy is πŸŒ› the Fibonacci system, where bets are calculated according

to the Fibonacci sequence. Regardless of the specific progression, no such strategy πŸŒ› can

statistically overcome the casino's advantage, since the expected value of each allowed

bet is negative.

Types of betting system [ πŸŒ› edit ]

Betting systems in roulette can be

divided in to two main categories:

Negative progression system (e.g.

Martingale)

Negative progression systems involve πŸŒ› increasing the size of one's bet when

they lose. This is the most common type of betting system. The goal πŸŒ› of this system is

to recoup losses faster so that one can return to a winning position more quickly after

πŸŒ› a losing streak. The typical shape of these systems is small but consistent wins

followed by occasional catastrophic losses. Examples πŸŒ› of negative progression systems

include the Martingale system, the Fibonacci system, the Labouchère system, and the

d'Alembert system.

Positive progression system πŸŒ› (e.g. Paroli)

Positive progression

systems involve increasing the size of one's bet when one wins. The goal of these

systems is πŸŒ› to either exacerbate the effects of winning streaks (e.g. the Paroli system)

or to take advantage of changes in luck πŸŒ› to recover more quickly from previous losses

(e.g. Oscar's grind). The shape of these systems is typically small but consistent

πŸŒ› losses followed by occasional big wins. However, over the long run these wins do not

compensate for the losses incurred πŸŒ› in between.[23]

Reverse Martingale system [ edit

]

The Reverse Martingale system, also known as the Paroli system, follows the idea of

πŸŒ› the martingale betting strategy, but reversed. Instead of doubling a bet after a loss

the gambler doubles the bet after πŸŒ› every win. The system creates a false feeling of

eliminating the risk of betting more when losing, but, in reality, πŸŒ› it has the same

problem as the martingale strategy. By doubling bets after every win, one keeps betting

everything they πŸŒ› have won until they either stop playing, or lose it all.

Labouchère

system [ edit ]

The LabouchΓ¨re System is a progression πŸŒ› betting strategy like the

martingale but does not require the gambler to risk their stake as quickly with

dramatic double-ups. πŸŒ› The Labouchere System involves using a series of numbers in a line

to determine the bet amount, following a win πŸŒ› or a loss. Typically, the player adds the

numbers at the front and end of the line to determine the πŸŒ› size of the next bet. If the

player wins, they cross out numbers and continue working on the smaller line. πŸŒ› If the

player loses, then they add their previous bet to the end of the line and continue to

work πŸŒ› on the longer line. This is a much more flexible progression betting system and

there is much room for the πŸŒ› player to design their initial line to their own playing

preference.

This system is one that is designed so that when πŸŒ› the player has won over a

third of their bets (less than the expected 18/38), they will win. Whereas the

πŸŒ› martingale will cause ruin in the event of a long sequence of successive losses, the

LabouchΓ¨re system will cause bet πŸŒ› size to grow quickly even where a losing sequence is

broken by wins. This occurs because as the player loses, πŸŒ› the average bet size in the

line increases.

As with all other betting systems, the average value of this system is

πŸŒ› negative.

D'Alembert system [ edit ]

The system, also called montant et demontant (from

French, meaning upwards and downwards), is often called πŸŒ› a pyramid system. It is based

on a mathematical equilibrium theory devised by a French mathematician of the same

name. πŸŒ› Like the martingale, this system is mainly applied to the even-money outside

bets, and is favored by players who want πŸŒ› to keep the amount of their bets and losses to

a minimum. The betting progression is very simple: After each πŸŒ› loss, one unit is added

to the next bet, and after each win, one unit is deducted from the next πŸŒ› bet. Starting

with an initial bet of, say, 1 unit, a loss would raise the next bet to 2 units. πŸŒ› If

this is followed by a win, the next bet would be 1 units.

This betting system relies on

the gambler's πŸŒ› fallacyβ€”that the player is more likely to lose following a win, and more

likely to win following a loss.

Other systems πŸŒ› [ edit ]

There are numerous other betting

systems that rely on this fallacy, or that attempt to follow 'streaks' (looking πŸŒ› for

patterns in randomness), varying bet size accordingly.

Many betting systems are sold

online and purport to enable the player to πŸŒ› 'beat' the odds. One such system was

advertised by Jason Gillon of Rotherham, UK, who claimed one could 'earn Β£200 πŸŒ› daily' by

following his betting system, described as a 'loophole'. As the system was advertised

in the UK press, it πŸŒ› was subject to Advertising Standards Authority regulation, and

following a complaint, it was ruled by the ASA that Mr. Gillon πŸŒ› had failed to support

his claims, and that he had failed to show that there was any loophole.

Notable

winnings [ πŸŒ› edit ]

In the 1960s and early 1970s, Richard Jarecki won aboutR$1.2 million

at dozens of European casinos. He claimed that πŸŒ› he was using a mathematical system

designed on a powerful computer. In reality, he simply observed more than 10,000 spins

πŸŒ› of each roulette wheel to determine flaws in the wheels. Eventually the casinos

realized that flaws in the wheels could πŸŒ› be exploited, and replaced older wheels. The

manufacture of roulette wheels has improved over time. [24]

In 1963 Sean Connery,

filming πŸŒ› From Russia with Love in Italy, attended the casino in Saint-Vincent and won

three consecutive times on the number 17, πŸŒ› his winnings riding on the second and third

spins. [25]

in Italy, attended the casino in Saint-Vincent and won three consecutive

πŸŒ› times on the number 17, his winnings on the second and third spins. In 2004, Ashley

Revell of London sold πŸŒ› all of his possessions, clothing included, and placed his entire

net worth of US$135,300 on red at the Plaza Hotel πŸŒ› in Las Vegas. The ball landed on "Red

7" and Revell walked away withR$270,600.[26]

See also [ edit ]

vocational rehabilitation success stories.

ocΓͺ normalmente ganharΓ‘ R$ 175. Isso ocorre porque o pagamento para umaposta de nΓΊmero

nico bem-sucedida (tambΓ©m conhecida como "aposta direta") ♣️ na Roleta americana

Γ© de 35 a 1. Se colocar? 5 em green roulette uma ΓΊnica roleta, quanto vocΓͺ ganha se...

-vocΓͺ-lugar-5-em-um-ΓΊnico-roulette-nΓΊmero-como-quant......

no para determinar quanto apostar em green roulette cada mΓ£o ou rotação da roda. VocΓͺ tambΓ©m pode

usar o sistema Martingale em πŸŽ… green roulette apostas esportivas., mas um sistema de corrida de

los MartinGale seria difΓ­cil. O Sistema de Apostas Martingate Explicado - Techopedia

hopΓ©dia πŸŽ… : guias de jogo.: martingale-betting-system Na maioria dos

A estratΓ©gia de

e de graça antes de jogar por dinheiro real.... 2 Estude a mesa e entenda as regras,

os de apostas e πŸ‘ probabilidades.... 3 Coloque apostas menores para poder jogar mais

. 4 NΓ£o jogue preto e vermelho.. 5 Jogue fora de aposta. πŸ‘ [...] 6 Aproveite os bΓ΄nus.

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