It has direct relevance for anyone who uses the double when you lose strategy in Roulette. It also has relevance to this thread, as per the quotes below:I know what your saying. But it has absolutely no relevance to playing roulette. So I don't understand why you would want to go down that path.
The second theory I liked was were you bet on either red or black/odd or even/0-18 or 19-36. Once again you just back in the same bet every time, for example, you always bet on Red.
With this each bet has a 47% chance of winning but you should always chase your losses with this stratergy.
For example, you if place 1 unit on red and that loses, you should bet 2 units on red.
If that wins, you made 1 unit profit. If it loses, you need to bet 4 units on red.
If the 4 unit bet wins, you make 1 unit profit. If it loses you need to bet 8 units...
Obviously, you need deep pockets for the second idea and hypothetically it would have you at a statistical advantage to the house, if you had infinate funds.
my mate puts ten on red if he wins he puts ten on again then if he lsoes he doubles it each time
so say he loses 5 times in a row he will be putting 160 on to get back up
Myself and a couple of mates have used the doubling and sequence strategy many times. At the start we were walking away with something like %300-700 profit of what we originally laid down but as of late we've been brought back to earth and have had a few nights of big losses...
From my experience it all comes down to luck and how many rolls in a row end up on the 2 to 1 were betting against like red over black for instance.
The most consecutive rolls of the same 2 to 1 odd i've ever seen is 10 which by then we'd lost as much as any1 would be willing to lose for a night.