Roulette

Roulette isn't rocket science, which explains why beginners and recreational casino gamblers tend to be drawn to the roulette table. You have the roulette wheel, that ever so familiar sight in casinos that makes roulette, along with blackjack, one of the most recognizable casino table games.

Roulette Game Rules

The wheel has colors, and it has numbers. You pick a color and/or number on which to place your bet. Case closed.

The Object of the Game

Roulette is a fairly straightforward casino game that requires a player simply to understand the available bets on the table, and how to place them. The roulette wheel is sectioned into compartments, each having a corresponding number and color.

The object of the game is to make a bet on the outcome of a ball about to be spun around the roulette wheel. On one hand, you can wager on an individual number, out of 37, where you think the ball will land. On the other hand, you can wager on a characteristic of the wheel compartment where you think the ball will land.

Like, you can bet the ball will end up on a certain color a red pocket, or black pocket, or as a rarer probability, find its way onto the green 0 pocket. You can wager the ball will stop at an odd or even number, or within the first or next 18 numbers, or within a particular column of numbers, and many other betting options. If the ball does indeed land true to your wager, you win.

Roulette Strategy

Roulette may be the easiest casino game to learn, for which reason strategies have less to do with playing the game and more with managing the bets. For starters, the slew of roulette systems being sold all over land-based casinos is utterly useless. So is any game strategy that involves spotting a winning streak. Systems are based on statistical perimeters while a streak is based on pattern, and none of this works for roulette. To state the obvious: the roulette wheel is completely random. One outcome of the spinning wheel has nothing to do with the last one or the next one. Your desired variable or pattern begins and ends at each landing of the ball.

Roulette Betting Tips

Perhaps the most sensible roulette strategy that can be offered is this: smart money management. That is, manage your bankroll in order to maximize your wins and minimize your losses.

Set a table limit for yourself. It would be wise to follow a loss limit equivalent to your starting bankroll. This way, you stand to lose only as much as your original bet, and are not tempted to shell out more money to return to the session. For example, if you began with $100 in one session and then walked away after losing $100, you can chuck it up to a bad day that did not get worse because you overspent and never got back on track. In addition, you can set a win limit, say, thrice your original bankroll. If you walk away after winning $300, you lower the risk of losing that money once you get caught up in a downswing.

Consider setting a loss limit of zero by pocketing the amount of your starting bet once you've won it back. Say your initial bankroll is $100. Once you win $100, keep it and start betting only your winnings from then on. This means whether you are winning or losing, it actually costs you 0 as you will have already pocketed your real investment.

Because every spin of the wheel is random, it would not hurt to spread your bets across the table with each roll. As your chances of winning increase, so do your chances of staying longer. For example, at a $10 minimum table, you can place $2 each on five different bets instead of all $10 on a single wager. If you scatter your money around bets, the odds are better that you extend your bankroll through more sessions.

Related Pages: Roulette Game Books | Roulette Game Sites | Roulette Lessons

 
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