If a dealer was capable of that control even 50% of the time you could bankrupt the house in a relatively short space of time. That doesn't seem that likely offhand, though I'd keep an open mind.
You would think this would come out more often publicly if this type of thing were possible. For example there are fairly frequent public stories about slot machine programmers building cheat codes into their own games-then later cleaning them out.
I stumbled upon a YouTube video. I thought it was created by the original poster in this thread. The YouTube author was, he claims, a casino veteran, up to casino manager. He was also a roulette dealer trainer. He claims that newbie dealers create biases like our OP describes in his post. One dealer landed the ball in the opposite sector (6 slots) from the last roulette number. Then in the same 6-slot sector as the last number spun! OP’s system would have worked 2 out of 2 spins!
Worth watching – truncated link
youtube.com/watch?v=f5MtY0VPjOw&t=919s
“Secrets of Roulette Prediction: Unveiling the Unseen Patterns”
As a full-time youtuber I can tell you any one using whiteboard animation is out to lunch. It means they couldn't be bothered to get any footage or demonstrate what they are talking about visually. Or spend more than an hour making it. They just pay some guy in Slovakia $10 to do it.
He could have just used a screen record to show a wheel online and select a few examples of a consistent throw. He was too lazy to even do that.
I've heard many people claim dealers can control the ball. Maybe some can but there isn't much evidence to that effect that isn't anecdotal. Every dealer I have tested was not close to being predictable.
Last edited by Archvaldor; 05-02-2024 at 02:30 PM.
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