Roulette Overview
Roulette is a Classic European roulette wheel (single zero) with 97.3% RTP and medium volatility. The maximum multiplier is 36x, making it a balanced game that offers consistent returns with occasional larger wins. Every outcome is provably fair — verified through HMAC-SHA256 cryptography.
Top Strategy Tips
1. European (single-zero) has better odds than American (double-zero): 2.7% vs 5.3% house edge.
2. Even-money bets (Red/Black, Odd/Even) give the most consistent results at ~48.6% win rate.
3. Straight-up number bets pay 35:1 but hit only 2.7% of the time — true gambler's bets.
4. The Martingale system (doubling after losses) works short-term but guarantees ruin eventually.
5. Combine inside and outside bets to create your own risk profile per spin.
Understanding the Odds
European roulette has 37 pockets (0–36). Each number has a 1/37 (2.703%) probability. Red/Black: 18/37 = 48.65%. Dozens/Columns: 12/37 = 32.43%. The zero (green) is what gives the house its edge — it's neither red nor black, odd nor even.
Bankroll Management
With a 2.7% house edge, Roulette will cost you about 2.7 coins per 100 wagered over the long run. To survive variance: never bet more than 2% of your total bankroll on a single spin. If your bankroll is 1,000 coins, keep bets at 20 or below. Set a stop-loss at 30% of your session bankroll and a win target at +50%. When you hit either limit, stop and reassess.
House Edge Explained
Roulette has a 2.7% house edge (97.3% RTP). Every bet type has the same edge. Straight-up pays 35:1 but fair odds would be 36:1. Red/Black pays 1:1 but probability is 48.65%, not 50%. The single zero pocket creates this universal 1/37 advantage for the house.
Provably Fair Verification
Every winning number in Roulette is cryptographically predetermined before you spin. The winning number is a single integer 0–36, derived from HMAC-SHA256(server_seed, client_seed:nonce). The first 4 bytes are converted to uint32, then modulo 37 gives the result. Uniform distribution across all 37 pockets is verified mathematically. Visit the Fairness page to verify any past result.