vofos
Playing Roulette: How to Get the Most for your Bet
Roulette is an amazingly popular form of gambling, but it is not talked about often. Despite showing up in casinos, Catholic fund raisers, and even online, there is little out there about the do's and don't's about roulette gambling compared to other casino attractions. Here, though, is a pokerbros app little bit you can take with you to that next Catholic fund raiser or trip to Vegas.
First of all, it is important to remember that each roulette spin carries its own set of odds. There is no correlation to future or past spins of the wheel. Many people believe that if, for instance, the ball lands black 3 times in a row, that the red is due. That is not statistically true. The truth is that the odds are precisely the same on each individual spin. It is not unlike flipping a coin: each time you flip a coin there is a one in two chance that you will get heads. That stays the same no matter how many heads you have flipped.
The best advice is to know the game you are playing since roulette offers so many options. For instance, try playing a European roulette wheel whenever possible. Your odds are double on a European wheel as they are on an American one, however; they are still in the casino's favor, of course. Obviously, European roulette wheels are not all that common in the United States, but it is helpful to know that if you do encounter a choice between the two that your odds are slightly better with the European wheel.
Another strategy to use is betting more on the bets that match their payout or are near it. Try betting evens, odds, high, read, black, etc. These generally pay out an even one to one so that you will have a better chance and better payout. Essentially, to use a simile from the above metaphor, it is like betting on a coin flip.
Finally, a great piece of advice in roulette is to never believe anyone who tells you they have a secret to solving roulette. Short of out and out cheating, the odds on roulette are what they are. The fall of the ball is truly random within the confines of the wheel so there is no way you can predict or "play the odds" in your favor because, simply, they are never in your favor.
Next time you find yourself standing at the roulette wheel at the casino, local catholic fundraiser, or even on your computer, think about what you are doing. The odds are always the same, so the only true way to improve your odds are through playing the better odds games and looking for the ever-elusive European roulette wheel.
#6 Three-bets and four-bets:
A three-bet means this: Someone bets (or raises preflop), then someone reraises, then someone reraises again (possibly the primary raiser).
This action is the third, hence 'three-bet'. If anyone moves over the top after this, then this action is the fourth, hence 'four-bet.'
To reraise a raise requires a really strong hand, then to reraise this needs a far stronger hand, then to reraise this reraise requires a hand much more stronger. Unless one is representing.
So we will make terms like 'three-bet-bluff' and 'four-bet-bluff', meaning 'a bluff with a three-bet or a four-bet'.
#7 Bluff all-in:
An all-in implies a strong hand. If you have nothing and this is what you do, then you 'bluff all-in'. It is good to bluff all-in during a dangerous board (one off a Straight or a Flush, or a paired Board) but it's more dangerous, because your opponent may have the nuts and call you.
In less dangerous boards, you can just bet and your opponent will fold if he has nothing - it has the same effect as the bluff all-in.
#8 Call all-in:
Technically, call all-in is nonaggressive. To call is not aggressive; you just moved all in because you have a hand that you will be willing to move all-in if you acted first, and someone just set you up to it (or maybe you slow-played and your opponent became aggressive and pushed you all-in and you called).
by vofos on 2020-07-07 07:54:44
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