Roulette
Roulette is a casino and gambling
game named after the French word meaning "small wheel". In the
game, a croupier spins a wheel in one direction, then spins a
ball in the opposite direction around a tilted circular surface
running around the circumference of the wheel. The ball
eventually falls on to the wheel and into one of 37 (in
European roulette) or 38 (in American roulette) colored and
numbered pockets on the wheel.[1]
Players place bets on the winning number and the color of
the pocket, whether the number is odd or even, etc The
pockets are numbered from 1 to 36, alternating between red
and black. There is a green pocket numbered 0. In American
roulette, there is a second green pocket marked 00. Pockets
are not in numerical order around the wheel. Some
consecutive numbers are the same color. Number sequence
clockwise:
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
Betting
Players can place a variety of 'inside'
bets (selecting the number of the pocket the ball will
land in, or range of pockets based on their position),
and 'outside' bets (including bets on various positional
groupings of pockets, pocket colors, or whether it is odd
or even). The payout odds for each type of bet is based
on its probability. The table usually imposes minimum and
maximum bets, and these rules usually apply separately
for all of a player's 'inside' and 'outside' bets for
each spin. Players can continue to place bets until the
dealer announces "No more bets."
History
Early roulette table, ca.
1800
The first form of roulette was devised in
18th century France. The roulette wheel is believed to be
a fusion of the English wheel games Roly-Poly, Ace of
Hearts, and E.O., and the Italian board games of Hoca and
Biribi, and then the name roulette from an already
existing French board game of that title.
The
game has been played in its current form since as early as 1796
in Paris. The earliest description of the roulette game in its
current form is found in a French novel "La Roulette, ou le
Jour" by Jaques Lablee, which describes a roulette wheel in the
Palais Royal in Paris in 1796. The description included the
house pockets, "There are exactly two slots reserved for the
bank, whence it derives its sole mathematical advantage." It
then goes on to describe the layout with, "...two betting
spaces containing the bank's two numbers, zero and double
zero." The book was published in 1801. An even earlier
reference to a game of this name was published in regulations
for New France (Canada) in 1758, which banned the games of
"dice, hoca, faro, and roulette." [2]
In 1843, in the German spa casino town of
Homburg, fellow Frenchmen François and Louis Blanc
introduced the single "0" style roulette wheel in order
to compete against other casinos offering the traditional
wheel with single and double zero house
pockets.
In some forms of early American roulette
wheels - as shown in the 1886 Hoyle gambling books, there
were numbers 1 through 28, plus a single zero, a double
zero, and an American Eagle. According to Hoyle "the
single 0, the double 0, and eagle are never bars; but
when the ball falls into either of them, the banker
sweeps every thing upon the table, except what may happen
to be bet on either one of them, when he pays
twenty-seven for one, which is the amount paid for all
sums bet upon any single figure."
In the 1800s, roulette spread all over
Europe and the U.S.A., becoming one of the most famous
and most popular casino games. When the German government
abolished gambling in the 1860s, the Blanc family moved
to the last legal remaining casino operation in Europe at
Monte Carlo, where they established a gambling mecca for
the elite of Europe. It was here that the single zero
roulette wheel became the premier game, and over the
years was exported around the world, except in the United
States where the double zero wheel had remained dominant.
Some call roulette the "King of Casino Games", probably
because it was associated with the glamour of the casinos
in Monte Carlo.
Layout depiction
The cloth covering with the betting areas
on a roulette table is known as a "layout." The layout is
either single zero or double zero. The French style
layout is a single zero, and the American style layout is
usually a double zero. The American style roulette table
with a wheel at one end is now used in most casinos. The
French style table with a wheel in the centre and a
layout on either side is rarely found outside of Monte
Carlo.

French layout single zero
wheel
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