The roulette cylinder was introduced in a primitive form, in the 17th century, by Blaise Pascal, a French physicist, philosopher ♨️ and inventor, in his quest to create for a perpetual motion machine. The game of roulette as we know it ♨️ today started being played a century later, around 1760, in France.

For the untrained eye, there is no difference between the ♨️ different types of roulette wheels, but at a closer look, the differences become self-evident. One of the first decisions that ♨️ roulette players need to make is whether to spin a European or American roulette, as these are the two main ♨️ types of roulette wheels. One big difference between them is that the American version has two zeroes on the cylinder, ♨️ which leads to a bigger advantage for the casino. This should have a deterring effect on prospective players, but there ♨️ are still plenty who choose this type of wheel, mainly because in some countries like the USA there are no ♨️ alternatives, as the vast majority of casinos houses only double zero wheels. Interestingly the first roulette introduced in France had ♨️ two zeros, but that changed when the German casinos wanted to compete and introduced the single zero roulette to attract ♨️ more clients.

Please note that except the different types of wheels there are also different types of tables and rules variations.

AMERICAN ♨️ ROULETTE

There are a total of 38 pockets on the American roulette wheel, ranging from 0 to 36, plus the additional ♨️ 00 number. 18 of these pockets are red, the other 18 are black while the two slots featuring 0 and ♨️ 00 are green. Speaking of these slots, they are placed at the opposite side of the cylinder, just like consecutive ♨️ numbers while overall there are no adjacent numbers of the same color. This is how the counterclockwise sequence of numbers ♨️ looks like on the American roulette wheel: 0, 2, 14, 35, 23, 4, 16, 33, 21, 6, 18, 31, 19, ♨️ 8, 12, 29, 25, 10, 27, 00, 1, 13, 36, 24, 3, 15, 34, 22, 5, 17, 32, 20, 7, ♨️ 11, 30, 26, 9, 28.