Roulette Gambling System
by Jerry "Jet" Whittaker
Feb 12, 2007
Roulette gambling
system:
Roulette gambling is one
of the easiest games to play and identify with in the
casino. As common the easier a game is to know the
greater the house edge and roulette is no exception. If
someone is looking for an easy to understand and slow
paced table game, and are willing to give up on the
house edge then one may like roulette. If the person
want something more stimulating or with a decent return
then better look for other games. The dissimilarity
between roulette and all other table games is that
roulette chips have no value printed on them. This
actually is the true definition of a chip. One that
indicates its value is technically called a check. The
roulette table comes with six to eight sets of different
coloured chips, each set consisting of 300 chips. When a
player buys in they get their own colour and the value
would be the buy in divided by the number of chips
received. The broker will place a token on top of the
broker's stack of that colour of chips to indicate the
value.
Wheel tracking and
betting system:
Some people claim that
roulette wheels are unfair with a heavy side and a light
side. Gravity causes the numbers in the heavy side to
strike more often. This can be true when the quality of
the equipment was poor. However modern
roulette
wheels are much better and very strictly tested.
Only in a casino using a very old wheel may be able to
find a partial one by testing many thousands of spins.
The oldest and most common betting system is the
martingale or doubling-up system, in which bets are
doubled gradually.
Number placement:
To the careless observer
it would appear that the numbers on the wheel are not
planned and seem to be scattered randomly. The only
obvious patterns are that red and black numbers
alternate and those usually two odd numbers alternate
with two even numbers. However the division of numbers
was carefully arranged so that the sum of the numbers
for any given section of the wheel would be
approximately equal to any other section of equal size.
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