In other words, the short run.Īnd in the short run, anything can happen. What I mean is that the man or woman who goes into their local casino every day for eight hours a day five days a week, for years to play roulette, like it was a regular job or something, is destined to lose.īut you and I however, are only likely to play roulette a few times each year, on short, and all-too-infrequent visits to Las Vegas. The good thing for roulette players like you and I (and I am a consistent roulette player), is that nobody really knows how long the long run actually is. You can, and often do, win at roulette, using a system. Roulette is not beatable in the long runįortunately, you won’t be playing it in the long run.Īnd that, is the basis for every roulette strategy you come across, whether it be found in a book, online in a video, or from a brother-in-law who has discovered a “system” that is guaranteed to win. For every $100 bet, the house will theoretically win $5.26, meaning your $100 will turn into $94.74. The house edge on a typical American casino roulette wheel that has two green slots, (a “0” and “00”) is 5.26%. That’s not my opinion, it’s a mathematical fact. Well keep looking, because there isn’t one. There are a million different strategies for rouletteĪre you looking for a roulette strategy that will have you winning at the game in the long run?