Roulette Strategies
What works, what doesn't, and why systems fail.
Roulette is a purely random game—the ball doesn't care where it landed before. Yet betting systems persist because they create the illusion of control. Let's explore the most popular systems and why they ultimately fail.
Warning
The Martingale System
The most famous (and dangerous) betting system:
- Bet 1 unit on an even-money bet (red/black)
- If you lose, double your bet
- When you win, restart at 1 unit
- Profit = 1 unit per "cycle"
Exponential growth in bet size, tiny reward.
Why Martingale Fails
- Table limits – You'll hit max bet after 7-8 losses
- Bankroll limits – Doubling requires huge capital
- Probability – 8+ consecutive losses happen more often than you'd think
Seems rare, but at 50 spins/hour, expect it every 5-6 hours of play.
The Fibonacci System
Based on the famous mathematical sequence:
- Sequence: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34...
- After a loss, move one step forward in sequence
- After a win, move two steps back
Strategy Insight
The D'Alembert System
A more conservative approach:
- Increase bet by 1 unit after a loss
- Decrease bet by 1 unit after a win
Smaller swings than Martingale, but still based on the false premise that wins and losses will eventually balance out in the short term.
The Labouchere System
Also called "cancellation":
- Write a sequence of numbers (e.g., 1-2-3-4)
- Bet the sum of first and last numbers (1+4 = 5)
- If you win, cross off those numbers
- If you lose, add the lost amount to the end
- Complete when all numbers are crossed off
Good to Know
Pattern Tracking
Many players track results looking for patterns:
Pattern Myths
| Belief | Reality |
|---|---|
| "Black is due after 10 reds" | Each spin is independent |
| "Follow the streak" | Streaks are only visible in hindsight |
| "Physical bias in wheel" | Modern wheels are precisely balanced |
| "Hot/cold numbers" | Sample size too small to be meaningful |
What Actually Works
Here's how to play roulette smarter:
Play European, Not American
Single zero (2.7%) beats double zero (5.26%) every time.
Find La Partage or En Prison
These rules reduce house edge on even-money bets to 1.35%.
Set Win/Loss Limits
Decide when to walk away before you start playing.
Bet for Entertainment
Accept that no system overcomes the edge. Budget for fun, not profit.
Historical Attempts at Beating Roulette
- Joseph Jagger (1873) – Found biased wheels in Monte Carlo, won equivalent of $5M
- Gonzalo Garcia-Pelayo – Used computers to find wheel bias in the 1990s
- Eudaemons (1970s) – Built computer to predict ball landing based on physics
Strategy Insight
Key Takeaways
- 1No betting system can overcome the mathematical house edge
- 2Martingale and similar systems risk catastrophic loss for tiny gains
- 3Each spin is independent—the wheel has no memory
- 4European roulette with La Partage offers the best odds (1.35%)
- 5Set loss limits and play for entertainment, not profit expectations