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Roulette?Gambling Game (named after the?French?word meaning “little wheel”) is a?casino?game which was likely developed from the?Italian?game?Biribi. In the game, a player may choose to place a bet on a single number, various groupings of numbers, the color red or black, whether the number is odd or even, or if the number is high or low.

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Roulette?Gambling Game

The roulette wheels used in the casinos of Paris in the late 1790s had red for the single zero and black for the double zero. To avoid confusion, the color green was selected for the zeros in roulette wheels starting in the 1800s.

Rules of play against a casino

Roulette players have a variety of betting options. “Inside” bets involve selecting either the exact number on which the ball will land, or a small group of numbers adjacent to each other on the layout. “Outside” bets, by contrast, allow players to select a larger group of numbers based on properties such as their color or parity (odd/even). The payout odds for each type of bet are based on its?probability

Types of bets

bets can be either?inside?or?outside.

Inside bets:

NameDescriptionChip placement
Straight/singleBet on a single numberEntirely within the square for the chosen number
SplitBet on two vertically/horizontally adjacent numbers (e.g. 14-17 or 8–9)On the edge shared by the numbers
StreetBet on three consecutive numbers in a horizontal line (e.g. 7-8-9)On the outer edge of the number at either end of the line
Corner/squareBet on four numbers that meet at one corner (e.g. 10-11-13-14)On the common corner
Six line/double streetBet on six consecutive numbers that form two horizontal lines (e.g. 31-32-33-34-35-36)On the outer corner shared by the two leftmost or the two rightmost numbers
Trio/basketA three-number bet that involves at least one zero: 0-1-2 (either layout); 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 fourBet on 0-1-2-3 (single-zero layout only)On the outer corner shared by 0-1 or 0-3
Top lineBet on 0-00-1-2-3 (double-zero layout only)On the outer corner shared by 0-1 or 00-3
Outside bets:

Outside bets typically have smaller payouts with better odds at winning. Except as noted, all of these bets lose if a zero comes up.

The roulette table is composed of two sections, the wheel itself and the betting layout, better known as the roulette layout. There are two styles of roulette tables. One has a single betting layout with the roulette wheel at one end, and the other has two layouts with the wheel in the centre. The wheel spins horizontally.

The game begins when one of the croupiers (dealers) in?attendance?calls for the players to make their bets, which they do by placing chips on the spaces of the layout on any number, group, or classification they hope will win.

The croupier usually starts the wheel spinning in a counterclockwise direction and then spins a small ivory or plastic ball onto the bowl’s back track in the opposite direction. Players may continue to place bets while the wheel and ball are in motion until the ball slows down and is about to drop off the back track, at which time one of the croupiers announces that no more bets may be made.

When the ball falls and comes to rest between any two metal?partitions?of the wheel, it marks the winning number (or a 0 or 00), the winning colour, and any other permitted bet that pertains to a winning number or symbol. The dealer immediately announces the winning number and its colour and places a special marker on the corresponding number on the layout. He first collects all losing bets, not disturbing the chips that are resting on winning spaces, and then pays off any winning bets.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^?“Blaise Pascal”.?Lemelson-MIT. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Retrieved?20 October?2017.
  2. ^?Epstein, Richard A. (2009).?The theory of gambling and statistical logic?(2nd?ed.). London: Academic.?ISBN?978-0-12-374940-6.
  3. ^?“Article?The Game of EO?in The?Sporting Magazine, February 1793, pages 274-275″. 1792.
  4. ^?Roulette Wheel Study, Ron Shelley, (1988)
  5. ^?“History of Roulette – Origins & Evolution”.?www.roulettesites.org. Retrieved?22 August?2021.
  6. ^?Trumps.?The Modern Pocket Hoyle: Containing Al The Games Of Skill And Chance As Played In This Country At The Present Time (1868). p.?220.?ISBN?978-1167231667.
  7. ^?Doak, Melissa J. (2011).?Gambling?: what’s at stake??(2011?ed.). Detroit, Mich.: Gale. p.?114.?ISBN?978-1414448619.
  8. ^?“California Roulette and California Craps as House-Banked Card Games”?(PDF). Archived from?the original?(PDF)?on 21 December 2016. Retrieved?2 January?2012.
  9. ^?“Predicting the outcome of roulette”.?ResearchGate. Retrieved?24 March?2021.
  10. ^?Scarne, John (1986).?Scarne’s new complete guide to gambling?(Fully rev., expanded, updated?ed.). New York: Simon & Schuster. p.?403.?ISBN?0-671-63063-6.
  11. ^?Barboianu, Catalin (2008).?Roulette Odds and Profits: The Mathematics of Complex Bets. Infarom. p.?23.?ISBN?9789738752078.
  12. ^?Roulette Math, en.wikibooks.org
  13. ^?“The Truth about Betting Systems”. wizardofodds.com. 15 June 2019. Retrieved?22 September?2020.
  14. ^?Billingsley, Patrick?(1986).?Probability and Measure?(2nd?ed.). John Wiley & Sons Inc. p.?94.?ISBN?9780471804789.
  15. ^?“Theage.com.au”. 24 June 2004.
  16. ^?Wheel of Fortune | Motley Fool, fool.com
  17. ^?Zender, Bill (2006).?Advantage Play for the Casino Executive.
  18. ^?The sting: did gang really use a laser, phone and a computer to take the Ritz for £1.3m? | Science | The Guardian, guardian.co.uk
  19. ^?du Sautoy, Marcus (2011).?The number mysteries?: a mathematical odyssey through everyday life?(1st Palgrave Macmillan?ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p.?237.?ISBN?978-0230113848.
  20. ^?“Roulette Systems”.?roulettestar.com. Retrieved?26 February?2021.
  21. ^?Slotnik, Daniel L. (12 August 2018).?“Richard Jarecki, Doctor Who Conquered Roulette, Dies at 86”.?The New York Times.
  22. ^?The complete illustrated guide to gambling?by Alan Wykes,?Doubleday, 1964, pp 226, 227. .?Internet Archive?(a free registration req.) >?[1]
  23. ^?“‘All or nothing’ gamble succeeds”. BBC. 12 April 2004. Retrieved?18 January?2017.
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