Roulette is a game of chance played on a table with a spinning wheel and numbered slots. Players place bets on a section of the table and win a payout when the ball lands in a slot that corresponds to their bet. You can continue betting until the croupier announces no more bets.
Origins
Despite the fact that roulette is considered to be a very modern game, its origins go back a long way. The first known version of the game was invented in 1655 by a French mathematician and physicist named Blaise Pascal. He was trying to create a perpetual motion machine when he stumbled upon the idea of using a rotating wheel with numbered slots.
Although some historians believe that Pascal’s invention was a result of his desire to make gambling legal, the truth is that roulette was actually derived from older games like the Italian game Biribi and the English game Hoca. These games were similar in structure and were played on a circular wheel with both even and odd bets. They may have been brought to France by Dominican monks at the end of the 17th century.
Variations
Roulette enthusiasts have many options when it comes to playing variations of this classic game. While each variant is a bit different from the next, all of them offer the same basic betting options and payouts. Some offer additional wagers or novel features, while others feature different numbers and varying turn order. Some variations also offer unique ways to win, such as Key Bet Roulette, which combines traditional betting options with novel features that can pay out up to 100x your original stake. This variation also allows players to take advantage of La Partage, which returns half of lost bets when the ball lands on 0. This feature is only available in French Roulette.