Spinning Wheel Gambling

Posted : admin On 4/2/2022
Spinning Wheel Gambling 8,2/10 4972 votes

Spinning fortune wheel, Internet casino banner with glowing lamps for online casino, poker, roulette, slot machines, card games. Vector illustration, shiny background Spinning fortune wheel, Internet casino banner with glowing lamps for online casino, poker, roulette, slot machines, card games. Spinning Wheels in Casino Games. The most common game using a spinning wheel is roulette, and it does have a single number bet. But it doesn’t have 24 stops – it has 38 different numbers. To make things more interesting, each number is also assigned a color, which you can also bet on.


A few months ago, a colleague of mine wrote about 2 staples of gambling – playing cards and dice. I thought it would be fun to write a sequel to that post looking at 2 more gambling staples:

Random number generators and spinning wheels.

In a sense, all gambling games use a random number generator online of some kind. After all, a spinning wheel with numbered spaces is generating random numbers. A deck of cards is, too.

But when most gambling writers and gamblers talk about an RNG, they’re talking about something more specific. I’ll cover the specifics of that on this page.

Spinning wheels with numbers on them are used in multiple games, too – the most notable of which is probably roulette. I’ll have some observations to share about spinning wheels, too.

This might lead you to think that this page is just about roulette and slot machine games, but, as you’ll see, it’s about more than that.

Possibilities and Probabilities in Gambling

All gambling, including and especially casino gambling, involves probability.

Gambling spinning wheel for sale

Probability is a way to measure how likely something is to happen.

As such, it involves numbers.

Before you can understand the first thing about gambling, you need at least general understanding of probability.

First, understand that the word “probability” has 2 meanings:

Gambling Spinning Wheel

  1. It’s the study of how likely things are to happen. It’s a branch of mathematics.
  2. It’s also the unit with which you measure how likely something is to happen. In that respect, probability is like distance or time – it’s something you can measure mathematically.

The entire field of probability math starts with one definition – the probability of something is a number between 0 and 1.

Something with a probability of 0 will never happen.

Something with a probability of 1 will always happen.

Most events have a probability of between 0 and 1. The closer the probability gets to 1, the likelier the event is to happen.

And if you know much about math, you know that any number between 0 and 1 is a fraction.

To determine the probability that something will happen, you take the number of ways it can happen and divide it by the total number of potential outcomes.

If you have a spinning wheel with 24 stops on it, and each of them has a different number, the probability of getting a specific number is 1/24.

This probability can be expressed as a fraction, but it can also be expressed as a decimal, a percentage, or as odds.

1/24 as a decimal is 0.041667.

As a percentage, it’s 4.1667%.

As odds, it’s 23 to 1.

Stating a probability as odds can be especially helpful when talking about gambling, because odds are also used to express how much you get paid when you win a bet.

For example, if the payout for picking a specific number on a spinning wheel is 23 to 1, you’d have a game where you’d break even in the long run.

If the payout were 22 to 1 (or less), you’d lose money on that game in the long run.

If the payout were 25 to 1 (or more), you’d win money on that game in the long run.

That’s the secret to how casino games are so profitable for the casino. They always pay out at odds that make you a long-term loser.

Spinning Wheels in Casino Games

The most common game using a spinning wheel is roulette, and it does have a single number bet. But it doesn’t have 24 stops – it has 38 different numbers.

To make things more interesting, each number is also assigned a color, which you can also bet on. That’s what makes roulette interesting, in fact – the number of bets available.

And all those bets offer payouts that ensure the house will win in the long run.

The inside bets have the lowest payouts. The most basic of these is the single number bet, which pays off at 35 to 1 odds. The odds of winning this bet, since there are 38 numbers on the wheel, are 37 to 1.

But you can also bet on 2 numbers, and if either of them win, you get paid off at 17 to 1. The odds of winning, though, are 18 to 1.

The most basic of the other bets are the bets on the colors red or black. If you bet on black, you win ALMOST half the time. But only 18 of the numbers are black, and 18 are red. The other 2 numbers – the 0 and the 00 – are green.

Spinning Roulette Wheel Animation

All the bets at the roulette table are scheduled to pay out in such a way that the house wins an average of 5.26% of each bet in the long run.

Another spinning wheel game that’s still found in some casinos is called the Wheel of Fortune. You don’t see it as often in modern casinos, but sometimes you do. The odds on this game are even worse than those in standard roulette.

The way the Wheel of Fortune works is that you win an amount equal to the dollar amount on the stop that lands. If it lands on a slot labeled $1, you win $1 on a $1 bet. If it lands on the $2 spot, you win $2, and so on – usually up to a $40 or $50 prize.

The trick is that you have to guess which number it will land on.

You only win $1 on the $1 spot if you bet on that one to win.

You only win $20 on the $20 spot if you bet on the $20 spot.

The house edge on the bets in this game change based on which bet you’re making. If you bet on nothing but the $1, you’re facing a house edge of 11.11%. If you bet on the $20, the house edge is 22.22%.

Remember, the house edge is the average amount you expect to lose. It’s based on the difference between the odds of winning and the payout odds when you do win.

Using Random Number Generators

Most of the time when a gambler talks about random number generators, he’s talking about the computer program inside a gambling machine that generates the results. This is true of the slot machines in the casino, but also the video poker games, which are the most common games using this RNG to generate results.

The casino has other gambling machines available, too, though – video blackjack and video roulette are also becoming more common.

The biggest user of a random number generator online software, though, is the online casino.

Even though the animation for each game LOOKS like the actual game in a real casino, the results are generated by a random number generator online program.

This is true of online roulette, online blackjack – even multiplayer poker uses an RNG to generate results.

This doesn’t imply that any of these games are cheating. The odds programmed into a random number generator on those games are the same as the odds of the same game in a regular casino. It’s easy to generate a random number generator online for a roulette game, for example:

You just need a program that generates numbers 1 through 38, each of which corresponds to a stop on the roulette wheel. When you push play, the computer stops on that number.

Since the machine runs through hundreds or thousands of numbers per second, it’s effectively impossible to predict any kind of pattern.

But not all online casino games use “fair” random number generators.

One popular no download casino launched a blackjack game (called “Spacejack”) a few years ago. It looks like blackjack, but it’s just a slot machine game. In other words, even though you get playing card pictures on the screen, the probabilities aren’t the same as you’d see from a deck of cards.

99% of the online casinos use a fair random number generator that has the probabilities you’d expect.

Wheel

Just watch out for the 1% that don’t.

This site, of course, only recommends casinos that offer fair games with RNGs that produce the kinds of results commensurate with a brick and mortar version of that same game.

Also, when it comes to slot machines, it’s traditionally impossible to calculate the odds of getting a specific symbol and a specific combination of symbols anyway.

Conclusion

It’s fun to talk about the different ways casino games use randomizers to create games for you to gamble on. It gets more interesting when you compare the odds of winning with the odds you get paid off at when you do win.

Most of these methods of randomization are familiar with anyone who gambles – playing cards, spinning wheels, random number generators, and dice are the most common.

Which kinds of casino games do you prefer?

Experiments, events, probability spaces[edit]

The technical processes of a game stand for experiments that generate aleatory events. Here are a few examples:

  • Throwing the dice in craps is an experiment that generates events such as occurrences of certain numbers on the dice, obtaining a certain sum of the shown numbers, and obtaining numbers with certain properties (less than a specific number, higher than a specific number, even, uneven, and so on). The sample space of such an experiment is {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} for rolling one die or {(1, 1), (1, 2), ..., (1, 6), (2, 1), (2, 2), ..., (2, 6), ..., (6, 1), (6, 2), ..., (6, 6)} for rolling two dice. The latter is a set of ordered pairs and counts 6 x 6 = 36 elements. The events can be identified with sets, namely parts of the sample space. For example, the event occurrence of an even number is represented by the following set in the experiment of rolling one die: {2, 4, 6}.
  • Spinning the roulette wheel is an experiment whose generated events could be the occurrence of a certain number, of a certain color or a certain property of the numbers (low, high, even, uneven, from a certain row or column, and so on). The sample space of the experiment involving spinning the roulette wheel is the set of numbers the roulette holds: {1, 2, 3, ..., 36, 0, 00} for the American roulette, or {1, 2, 3, ..., 36, 0} for the European. The event occurrence of a red number is represented by the set {1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 14, 16, 18, 19, 21, 23, 25, 27, 30, 32, 34, 36}. These are the numbers inscribed in red on the roulette wheel and table.
  • Dealing cards in blackjack is an experiment that generates events such as the occurrence of a certain card or value as the first card dealt, obtaining a certain total of points from the first two cards dealt, exceeding 21 points from the first three cards dealt, and so on. In card games we encounter many types of experiments and categories of events. Each type of experiment has its own sample space. For example, the experiment of dealing the first card to the first player has as its sample space the set of all 52 cards (or 104, if played with two decks). The experiment of dealing the second card to the first player has as its sample space the set of all 52 cards (or 104), less the first card dealt. The experiment of dealing the first two cards to the first player has as its sample space a set of ordered pairs, namely all the 2-size arrangements of cards from the 52 (or 104). In a game with one player, the event the player is dealt a card of 10 points as the first dealt card is represented by the set of cards {10♠, 10♣, 10♥, 10♦, J♠, J♣, J♥, J♦, Q♠, Q♣, Q♥, Q♦, K♠, K♣, K♥, K♦}. The event the player is dealt a total of five points from the first two dealt cards is represented by the set of 2-size combinations of card values {(A, 4), (2, 3)}, which in fact counts 4 x 4 + 4 x 4 = 32 combinations of cards (as value and symbol).
  • In 6/49 lottery, the experiment of drawing six numbers from the 49 generates events such as drawing six specific numbers, drawing five numbers from six specific numbers, drawing four numbers from six specific numbers, drawing at least one number from a certain group of numbers, etc. The sample space here is the set of all 6-size combinations of numbers from the 49.
  • In draw poker, the experiment of dealing the initial five card hands generates events such as dealing at least one certain card to a specific player, dealing a pair to at least two players, dealing four identical symbols to at least one player, and so on. The sample space in this case is the set of all 5-card combinations from the 52 (or the deck used).
  • Dealing two cards to a player who has discarded two cards is another experiment whose sample space is now the set of all 2-card combinations from the 52, less the cards seen by the observer who solves the probability problem. For example, if you are in play in the above situation and want to figure out some odds regarding your hand, the sample space you should consider is the set of all 2-card combinations from the 52, less the three cards you hold and less the two cards you discarded. This sample space counts the 2-size combinations from 47.

The probability model[edit]

A probability model starts from an experiment and a mathematical structure attached to that experiment, namely the space (field) of events. The event is the main unit probability theory works on. In gambling, there are many categories of events, all of which can be textually predefined. In the previous examples of gambling experiments we saw some of the events that experiments generate. They are a minute part of all possible events, which in fact is theset of all parts of the sample space.

For a specific game, the various types of events can be:

  • Events related to your own play or to opponents’ play;
  • Events related to one person’s play or to several persons’ play;
  • Immediate events or long-shot events.

Each category can be further divided into several other subcategories, depending on the game referred to. These events can be literally defined, but it must be done very carefully when framing a probability problem. From a mathematical point of view, the events are nothing more than subsets and the space of events is a Boolean algebra. Among these events, we find elementary and compound events, exclusive and nonexclusive events, and independent and non-independent events.

In the experiment of rolling a die:

  • Event {3, 5} (whose literal definition is occurrence of 3 or 5) is compound because {3, 5}= {3} U {5};
  • Events {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6} are elementary;
  • Events {3, 5} and {4} are incompatible orexclusive because their intersection is empty; that is, they cannot occur simultaneously;
  • Events {1, 2, 5} and {2, 5} are nonexclusive, because their intersection is not empty;
  • In the experiment of rolling two dice one after another, the events obtaining 3 on the first die and obtaining 5 on the second die are independent because the occurrence of the second event is not influenced by the occurrence of the first, and vice versa.

In the experiment of dealing the pocket cards in Texas Hold’em Poker:

  • The event of dealing (3♣, 3♦) to a player is an elementary event;
  • The event of dealing two 3’s to a player is compound because is the union of events (3♣, 3♠), (3♣, 3♥), (3♣, 3♦), (3♠, 3♥), (3♠, 3♦) and (3♥, 3♦);
  • The events player 1 is dealt a pair of kings and player 2 is dealt a pair of kings are nonexclusive (they can both occur);
  • The events player 1 is dealt two connectors of hearts higher than J and player 2 is dealt two connectors of hearts higher than J are exclusive (only one can occur);
  • The events player 1 is dealt (7, K) and player 2 is dealt (4, Q) are non-independent (the occurrence of the second depends on the occurrence of the first, while the same deck is in use).

These are a few examples of gambling events, whose properties of compoundness, exclusiveness and independency are easily observable. Theseproperties are very important in practical probability calculus.

Spinning wheel roulette

The complete mathematical model is given by the probability field attached to the experiment, which is the triple sample space—field of events—probability function. For any game of chance, the probability model is of the simplest type—the sample space is finite, the space of events is the set of parts of the sample space, implicitly finite, too, and the probability function is given by the definition of probability on a finite space of events:

Combinations[edit]

Games of chance are also good examples of combinations, permutations and arrangements, which are met at every step: combinations of cards in a player’s hand, on the table or expected in any card game; combinations of numbers when rolling several dice once; combinations of numbers in lottery and bingo; combinations of symbols in slots; permutations and arrangements in a race to be bet on, and the like. Combinatorial calculus is an important part of gambling probability applications. In games of chance, most of the gambling probability calculus in which we use the classical definition of probability reverts to counting combinations. The gaming events can be identified with sets, which often are sets of combinations. Thus, we can identify an event with a combination.

For example, in a five draw poker game, the event at least one player holds a four of a kind formation can be identified with the set of all combinations of (xxxxy) type, where x and y are distinct values of cards. This set has 13C(4,4)(52-4)=624 combinations. Possible combinations are (3♠ 3♣ 3♥ 3♦ J♣) or (7♠ 7♣ 7♥ 7♦ 2♣). These can be identified with elementary events that the event to be measured consists of.

Expectation and strategy[edit]

Games of chance are not merely pure applications of probability calculus and gaming situations are not just isolated events whose numerical probability is well established through mathematical methods; they are also games whose progress is influenced by human action. In gambling, the human element has a striking character. The player is not only interested in the mathematical probability of the various gaming events, but he or she has expectations from the games while a major interaction exists. To obtain favorable results from this interaction, gamblers take into account all possible information, including statistics, to build gaming strategies. The oldest and most common betting system is the martingale, or doubling-up, system on even-money bets, in which bets are doubled progressively after each loss until a win occurs. This system probably dates back to the invention of the roulette wheel. Two other well-known systems, also based on even-money bets, are the d’Alembert system (based on theorems of the French mathematician Jean Le Rond d’Alembert), in which the player increases his bets by one unit after each loss but decreases it by one unit after each win, and the Labouchere system (devised by the British politician Henry Du Pré Labouchere, although the basis for it was invented by the 18th-century French philosopher Marie-Jean-Antoine-Nicolas de Caritat, marquis de Condorcet), in which the player increases or decreases his bets according to a certain combination of numbers chosen in advance.[1][2] The predicted average gain or loss is called expectation or expected value and is the sum of the probability of each possible outcome of the experiment multiplied by its payoff (value). Thus, it represents the average amount one expects to win per bet if bets with identical odds are repeated many times. A game or situation in which the expected value for the player is zero (no net gain nor loss) is called a fair game. The attribute fair refers not to the technical process of the game, but to the chance balance house (bank)–player.

Even though the randomness inherent in games of chance would seem to ensure their fairness (at least with respect to the players around a table—shuffling a deck or spinning a wheel do not favor any player except if they are fraudulent), gamblers always search and wait for irregularities in this randomness that will allow them to win. It has been mathematically proved that, in ideal conditions of randomness, and with negative expectation, no long-run regular winning is possible for players of games of chance. Most gamblers accept this premise, but still work on strategies to make them win either in the short term or over the long run.

House advantage or edge[edit]

Casino games provide a predictable long-term advantage to the casino, or 'house' while offering the player the possibility of a large short-term payout. Some casino games have a skill element, where the player makes decisions; such games are called 'random with a tactical element.' While it is possible through skillful play to minimize the house advantage, it is extremely rare that a player has sufficient skill to completely eliminate his inherent long-term disadvantage (the house edge or house vigorish) in a casino game. The common belief is that such a skill set would involve years of training, extraordinary memory, and numeracy, and/or acute visual or even aural observation, as in the case of wheel clocking in Roulette. For more examples see Advantage gambling.

The player's disadvantage is a result of the casino not paying winning wagers according to the game's 'true odds', which are the payouts that would be expected considering the odds of a wager either winning or losing. For example, if a game is played by wagering on the number that would result from the roll of one die, true odds would be 5 times the amount wagered since there is a 1/6 probability of any single number appearing. However, the casino may only pay 4 times the amount wagered for a winning wager.

The house edge (HE) or vigorish is defined as the casino profit expressed as a percentage of the player's original bet. In games such as Blackjack or Spanish 21, the final bet may be several times the original bet, if the player doubles or splits.

Example: In American Roulette, there are two zeroes and 36 non-zero numbers (18 red and 18 black). If a player bets $1 on red, his chance of winning $1 is therefore 18/38 and his chance of losing $1 (or winning -$1) is 20/38.

The player's expected value, EV = (18/38 x 1) + (20/38 x -1) = 18/38 - 20/38 = -2/38 = -5.26%. Therefore, the house edge is 5.26%. After 10 rounds, play $1 per round, the average house profit will be 10 x $1 x 5.26% = $0.53.Of course, it is not possible for the casino to win exactly 53 cents; this figure is the average casino profit from each player if it had millions of players each betting 10 rounds at $1 per round.

The house edge of casino games varies greatly with the game. Keno can have house edges up to 25% and slot machines can have up to 15%, while most Australian Pontoon games have house edges between 0.3% and 0.4%.

The calculation of the Roulette house edge was a trivial exercise; for other games, this is not usually the case. Combinatorial analysis and/or computer simulation is necessary to complete the task.

In games that have a skill element, such as Blackjack or Spanish 21, the house edge is defined as the house advantage from optimal play (without the use of advanced techniques such as card counting or shuffle tracking), on the first hand of the shoe (the container that holds the cards). The set of the optimal plays for all possible hands is known as 'basic strategy' and is highly dependent on the specific rules, and even the number of decks used. Good Blackjack and Spanish 21 games have to house edges below 0.5%.

Online slot games often have a published Return to Player (RTP) percentage that determines the theoretical house edge. Some software developers choose to publish the RTP of their slot games while others do not.[3] Despite the set-theoretical RTP, almost any outcome is possible in the short term.[4]

Standard deviation[edit]

The luck factor in a casino game is quantified using standard deviation (SD). The standard deviation of a simple game like Roulette can be simply calculated because of the binomial distribution of successes (assuming a result of 1 unit for a win, and 0 units for a loss). For the binomial distribution, SD is equal to npq{displaystyle {sqrt {npq}}}, where n{displaystyle n} is the number of rounds played, p{displaystyle p} is the probability of winning, and q{displaystyle q} is the probability of losing. Furthermore, if we flat bet at 10 units per round instead of 1 unit, the range of possible outcomes increases 10 fold. Therefore, SD for Roulette even-money bet is equal to 2bnpq{displaystyle 2b{sqrt {npq}}}, where b{displaystyle b} is the flat bet per round, n{displaystyle n} is the number of rounds, p=18/38{displaystyle p=18/38}, and q=20/38{displaystyle q=20/38}.

After enough large number of rounds the theoretical distribution of the total win converges to the normal distribution, giving a good possibility to forecast the possible win or loss. For example, after 100 rounds at $1 per round, the standard deviation of the win (equally of the loss) will be 2$110018/3820/38$9.99{displaystyle 2cdot $1cdot {sqrt {100cdot 18/38cdot 20/38}}approx $9.99}. After 100 rounds, the expected loss will be 100$12/38$5.26{displaystyle 100cdot $1cdot 2/38approx $5.26}.

The 3 sigma range is six times the standard deviation: three above the mean, and three below. Therefore, after 100 rounds betting $1 per round, the result will very probably be somewhere between $5.263$9.99{displaystyle -$5.26-3cdot $9.99} and $5.26+3$9.99{displaystyle -$5.26+3cdot $9.99}, i.e., between -$34 and $24. There is still a ca. 1 to 400 chance that the result will be not in this range, i.e. either the win will exceed $24, or the loss will exceed $34.

Gambling wheel games

The standard deviation for the even-money Roulette bet is one of the lowest out of all casinos games. Most games, particularly slots, have extremely high standard deviations. As the size of the potential payouts increase, so does the standard deviation.

Unfortunately, the above considerations for small numbers of rounds are incorrect, because the distribution is far from normal. Moreover, the results of more volatile games usually converge to the normal distribution much more slowly, therefore much more huge number of rounds are required for that.

As the number of rounds increases, eventually, the expected loss will exceed the standard deviation, many times over. From the formula, we can see the standard deviation is proportional to the square root of the number of rounds played, while the expected loss is proportional to the number of rounds played. As the number of rounds increases, the expected loss increases at a much faster rate. This is why it is practically impossible for a gambler to win in the long term (if they don't have an edge). It is the high ratio of short-term standard deviation to expected loss that fools gamblers into thinking that they can win.

The volatility index (VI) is defined as the standard deviation for one round, betting one unit. Therefore, the VI for the even-money American Roulette bet is 18/3820/380.499{displaystyle {sqrt {18/38cdot 20/38}}approx 0.499}.

Free online spinner wheel

The variance v{displaystyle v} is defined as the square of the VI. Therefore, the variance of the even-money American Roulette bet is ca. 0.249, which is extremely low for a casino game. The variance for Blackjack is ca. 1.2, which is still low compared to the variances of electronic gaming machines (EGMs).

Additionally, the term of the volatility index based on some confidence intervals are used. Usually, it is based on the 90% confidence interval. The volatility index for the 90% confidence interval is ca. 1.645 times as the 'usual' volatility index that relates to the ca. 68.27% confidence interval.

It is important for a casino to know both the house edge and volatility index for all of their games. The house edge tells them what kind of profit they will make as percentage of turnover, and the volatility index tells them how much they need in the way of cash reserves. The mathematicians and computer programmers that do this kind of work are called gaming mathematicians and gaming analysts. Casinos do not have in-house expertise in this field, so they outsource their requirements to experts in the gaming analysis field.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Roulette'. britannica.
  2. ^'D'Alembert roulette system'.
  3. ^'Online slots Return to Player (RTP) explained - GamblersFever'.
  4. ^'Return to Player and Hit frequency - What do these mean? - GetGamblingFacts'.

Further reading[edit]

  • The Mathematics of Gambling, by Edward Thorp, ISBN0-89746-019-7
  • The Theory of Gambling and Statistical Logic, Revised Edition, by Richard Epstein, ISBN0-12-240761-X
  • The Mathematics of Games and Gambling, Second Edition, by Edward Packel, ISBN0-88385-646-8
  • Probability Guide to Gambling: The Mathematics of Dice, Slots, Roulette, Baccarat, Blackjack, Poker, Lottery and Sport Bets, by Catalin Barboianu, ISBN973-87520-3-5excerpts
  • Luck, Logic, and White Lies: The Mathematics of Games, by Jörg Bewersdorff, ISBN1-56881-210-8introduction.

External links[edit]

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