Roulette is, at heart, a simple game. So trust French casino-dwellers to develop some rather more intricate ways in which ♣️ to play. If you're given the chance to play a French-style roulette table, then you should, as this will probably ♣️ give you access to the punter-friendly En Prison/La Partage rules. Combine these with a single zero layout (unlike double-zero American-style ♣️ tables), and the house edge falls to around 1.4%. However, if you are taking a spin on a true French ♣️ table, you'll find much that's, erm, foreign. And most of this will be due to the existence of bet types ♣️ like Voisins du Zero, Tiers du Cylindre, and Orphelins.
Orphelins are also fairly straightforward. Here, you place a single chip on ♣️ the number 1, and four further chips on the following number combinations 6/9, 14/17, 17/20, and 31/34. You obviously have ♣️ only a 2.7% (1 out of 37) chance of winning with the 1, although you would scoop a profit of ♣️ 31 chips when successful - 35 chips for the win, minus the four chips lost on the other combinations. The ♣️ four two-number combinations, on the other hand, would each give you a profit of only 13 chips (17 chips for ♣️ the win, minus the four losing chips), but would pay out 5.4% of the time. This works out as a ♣️ total win rate of 24.3%.
Tiers du Cylindre - 32.4% success. 6 chips needed.
Tiers du Cylindre (six chips):
One chip on: 1
blaze foguete