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Flat Betting

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FLAT BETTING WITH ROULETTE

We thought it would be best to give a mention to flat betting with roulette and outline the upsides
and downsides to it. Almost every roulette strategy ever created involves some kind of
Mathematical progression where you either increase your bets after a loss or increase them after
a win, the Martingale being the most common.
Flat betting doesn’t involve any of that; you simply bet the same amount over and over again. If
you do this, you can expect to lose to the house edge over the long term of play, give or take a
little bit.
To give an easy example of this, let’s lay you’re playing a European roulette game and you spin
the wheel 37 times, each time betting on Red. If the numbers were distributed evenly, you would
win 18 and lose 19 (18 Blacks plus the 0) so you would gradually lose to the house edge (2.7%
for European, 5.26% for American).
The problem with flat betting on the even chance bets is that you never really get ahead and
there’s always the zero tipping the odds in the casino’s favor. Most people use flat betting on the
inside bets such as Straight up (single number) or Split bets.
The advantage of using flat betting on Straight up bets is that you get a big win and find yourself
in profit if your number hits early. On the other side of that coin though, it can take a long time
for the number to hit and you may find that it doesn’t hit at all throughout your entire session.
The main advantages of flat betting are the following:
 It’s steady and you know how much you’re going to be betting on each spin with no
mathematical progressions to work out.
 You won’t suffer large losses in just a few spins like you will with other roulette systems
like the Martingale.
 On a lucky day, you may get a small win.
The main disadvantages are:
 Not much scope for profit even on a lucky day.
 You will likely lose to the house edge over the long term of play.
 It can be boring just betting the same amount over and over again.
In the great scheme of things, flat betting is probably the safest form of roulette betting because
if the numbers are distributed evenly you will only lose slowly to the house edge. If you are in a
real casino and you want to maximize your tie at the table without risking too much, flat betting
is your best option. Keep in mind though that the profit potential with this method of playing is
minimal because like all forms of gambling, the less you risk the lower the potential reward if
you win.
Winning With Flat Betting
So far, what we’ve shown is that flat betting will lose to the house edge over the long term of
play. If, however, the odds were reversed in your favor, that would mean that you would win to
your advantage with flat bets over the long term of play.
While that may sound impossible, it isn’t with the use of a roulette computer which is a cheating
device that predicts where the ball will land on each spin. They can give the player an advantage
of over 30% which means that for every £100 you bet, you could expect to win £130.
Sound too good to be true? People have successfully won millions with the use of roulette
computers, so it isn’t complete fantasy. The problem is that they’re illegal in many jurisdictions
and even if they aren’t, finding and buying a roulette computer on the Internet is a minefield (and
very expensive).

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