roulette, (from French: βsmall wheelβ), gambling game in which players bet on which red or black numbered compartment of a π revolving wheel a small ball (spun in the opposite direction) will come to rest within. Bets are placed on a π table marked to correspond with the compartments of the wheel. It is played in casinos worldwide. Roulette is a banking π game, and all bets are placed against the bankβthat is, the house, or the proprietor of the game. As a π big-time betting game, it has had its popularity superseded in the United States and the Caribbean islands by others, notably π craps, blackjack, and poker. Fanciful stories about the origin of roulette include its invention by the 17th-century French mathematician Blaise π Pascal, by a French monk, and by the Chinese, from whom it was supposedly transmitted to France by Dominican monks. π In reality, roulette was derived in France in the early 18th century from the older games hoca and portique, and π it is first mentioned under its current name in 1716 in Bordeaux. Following several modifications, roulette achieved its present layout π and wheel structure about 1790, after which it rapidly gained status as the leading game in the casinos and gambling π houses of Europe. During the years 1836 to 1933, roulette was banned in France.
Equipment The roulette table is composed of π two sections, the wheel itself and the betting layout, better known as the roulette layout. There are two styles of π roulette tables. One has a single betting layout with the roulette wheel at one end, and the other has two π layouts with the wheel in the centre. The wheel spins horizontally. Heading the layout design, which is printed on green π baize, is a space containing the figure 0 (European style) or the figures 0 and 00 (American style, although such π wheels were used also in Europe during the 18th and 19th centuries). The main portion of the design is composed π of 36 consecutively numbered rectangular spaces, alternately coloured red and black and arranged in three columns of 12 spaces each, π beginning with 1 at the top and concluding with 36 at the bottom. Directly below the numbers are three blank π spaces (on some layouts these are marked β2 to 1β and are located on the playersβ side of the table). π On either side of these or along one side of the columns are rectangular spaces marked β1st 12,β β2nd 12,β π and β3rd 12β on American-style layouts. On European-style layouts these terms are β12pβ (premiΓ¨re), β12mβ (milieu), and β12dβ (derniΓ¨re douzaine). π Six more spaces are marked βredβ (rouge), βblackβ (noir), βevenβ (pair), βoddβ (impair), β1β18β (low, or manque), and β19β36β (high, π or passe). The roulette wheel consists of a solid wooden disk slightly convex in shape. Around its rim are metal π partitions known as separators or frets, and the compartments or pockets between these are called canoes by roulette croupiers. Thirty-six π of these compartments, painted alternately red and black, are numbered nonconsecutively from 1 to 36. On European-style wheels a 37th π compartment, painted green, carries the sign 0, and on American wheels two green compartments on opposite sides of the wheel π carry the signs 0 and 00. The wheel, its spindle perfectly balanced, spins smoothly in an almost frictionless manner. The π standard roulette table employs up to 10 sets of wheel checks (usually called chips). Each set is differently coloured; each π traditionally consists of 300 chips; and there is one set for each player. The chips usually have a single basic π value, although some casinos also sell chips of lesser value. The colour of the chips indicates the player, not the π value of the chips. If a player wishes to buy chips of slightly higher value, the croupier places a marker π indicating that value on top of the tableβs stack of chips of the colour corresponding to the chips purchased. Most π casinos also have high-value chips that can be wagered at any gaming table. Unlike roulette chips, these have their numbered π values printed on them. Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now