Progressive Gambling Roulette

Progressive Gambling Roulette Rating: 5,8/10 4582 votes

Roulette Progressive Roulette Progressive is a first of its kind offering, allowing an optional progressive bet to be placed on a Roulette table for an opportunity to win a combination of bespoke progressive, fixed and/or mystery jackpots. With the possibilities of winning real cash, it’s no wonder that passionate players of roulette would seek ways to beat the house. Through years of trial and errors, casino goers can now take advantage of well-developed betting strategies which are a great help in overcoming the casino edge.

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1 member has voted

MrCasinoGames
THE FIRST Roulette-Progressive. Invented by Stephen Au-Yeung ©2008.
Personal Lucky-Numbers™ Triple-Pot Progressive® 私人號碼 輪盤累積獎金​™

Progressive Gambling Roulette Games

THE FIRST Roulette-Progressive. Based on a spin of a Roulette in combination with other Random Event/s ©2008. Patented: US 7,686,306 http://bit.ly/2PufY8t
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RULES:
Personal Lucky-Numbers™ Triple-Pot Progressive® is a Progressive-bet for Any Roulette-game.
1. The house begins by seeding three Jackpots for a total of ___ units:
2. Each Player making a Progressive-bet does so by posting a one-unit wager on a Personal Lucky-Number from 0 to 36 (Single zero Roulette) or 00 to 36 (Double Zero Roulette) at the start of the spin.
These bets are collected before the spin starts and as a result, the payouts in this report are all “for 1”.
3. If the Roulette ball lands on a Player’s Personal Lucky-Number, then the Random Event/s is used to determine the Pay-outs.

Progressive Gambling Roulette Sites

4. The Player who hit his Personal Lucky-Number is then eligible for one of the following Pay-outs:
a. If the Player hit their Personal Lucky-Number on the Roulette-wheel and… the Player wins the Top-Jackpot.
b. If the Player hit their Personal Lucky-Number on the Roulette-wheel and… the Player wins the Middle-Jackpot.
c. If the Player hit their Personal Lucky- Number on the Roulette-wheel and… the Player wins the Bottom-Jackpot.
d. Otherwise, the Player is eligible for one of the Flat Pay-outs, as follows:...
P.S. This Roulette-Progressive game, can only take 8-Players. (Because of the Table-size)
The Question is?
What do you think is a good House-Edge?
What is a good odds for the Top-Jackpot to be hit?
Any Comments are Welcome Good or Bad (Please give Comments with reasons) so I know WHY and learn from it.
Also Try: FREE-Play Personal Lucky-Numbers™ Double-Six® (Roulette Side-bet) on Mobile or PC:PlayRouletteTimes66.com
Stephen Au-Yeung (Legend of New Table Games®) NewTableGames.com
SOOPOO
Thanks for this post from:
So much depends on what you figure out for the 'random event'. But how about lowest jackpot 1/500
Middle jackpot 1/10,000. Top jackpot 1/1,000,000
House edge only 9%. Over 10% sounds bad. (Which is like most bets like this)
MrCasinoGames

So much depends on what you figure out for the 'random event'. But how about lowest jackpot 1/500
Middle jackpot 1/10,000. Top jackpot 1/1,000,000
House edge only 9%. Over 10% sounds bad. (Which is like most bets like this)


GamblingHi SOOPOO,
I think Your set-up will work, if there are a multi-table link-up say 6+ Tables, but not for a Single-table with 8-Players max per spin (this will take to long for it to be hit, then the game will be come too boring).
That is why Caribbean Stud Poker died, because it does't not work well on Single-table games.
Also that is why I invented:
1. THE FIRST Mix-Poker link-Progressive (Caribbean Stud link with Casino Hold'em®, Caribbean-Draw and Three-Card Poker) back in 2003, play in Eastern-Europe and Russia.
2. THE FIRST Quick-Hit™ Hold'em-Progressive™ (5-card out of 7) in 2006.
Roulette3. THE FIRST Quick-Hit with Triple-Pot Progressive® (Raise'em® Poker-Plus™) in 2012. The Number-1 Poker-Progressive in South-Africa with 150+ Tables installed. http://bit.ly/2u1qy90

Progressive Gambling Roulette Game


Progressive Gambling Roulette Poker

* TODAY: You can see this 3 NEW Poker-Progressive invensions all over the U.S (Mix-Poker link-Progressive Quick-Hit™ Progressive™ Quick-Hit plus Triple-Pot Progressive®).
* Meet Stephen Au-Yeung, Creator of Casino Hold’em®, Unlimited® Blackjack™, Raise'em® Poker-Plus™ and... http://bit.ly/2KiadqT
The NEW Question is: What is a good set-up on the Jackpots, for a Single-table with 8-Players max per spin. Any one?
Last edited by: MrCasinoGames on Sep 2, 2019
Roulette
Stephen Au-Yeung (Legend of New Table Games®) NewTableGames.com

A progressive parlay is a joint wager on multiple events, for example team sports or horse races. Generally a progressive parlay involves a joint wager on four to twelve separate events.[1] Should all the selected bets win, the bettor receives a relatively large payout, because of the sizable odds against this happening. However, unlike a regular parlay, if some of the individual bets lose, but most win, the bettor still wins, although with a much smaller payout. Several sites use a schedule where the bettor can lose one bet on a 4-6 event progressive parlay, can lose up to two bets on a 7-9 event progressive parlay, and up to three bets on a 10-12 event progressive parlay.[1][2][3][4]

The term has also been used for a long series of wagers on roulette or other gambling games, where the bettor attempts to rely on a 'stream of luck'.[5][6][7][8]

Strategies[edit]

Several strategies have been suggested by gambling consultants when wagering on parlays or progressive parlays, one of them being to pick interrelated outcomes. For example, a bettor may believe that one team is likely to win if the game is a low-scoring affair while the other team is almost certain to win if the game becomes a high scoring shootout. If the bettor uses a parlay to bet on the first team along with an under bet against the point total, he stands to gain 2.6 units ($260 if $100 is bet) on an original investment of 1 unit (the most common unit in betting is $100 although any amount can be substituted as a unit) compared to a payout of just 1.82 units ($182) if the bets are made independently of each other. Conversely, if both outcomes are missed, one will only lose his original 1 unit investment rather than the 2 units one would lose if it had wagered on the events individually. This minimized risk is another notable potential positive of a parlay. If a bettor wishes to bet on a significant number of events without putting a substantial amount of his total bankroll at stake, parlays may represent an attractive option. By turning 12 individual events into four 3 event parlays, the bettor reduces the number of units he is risking from 12 to 4 while simultaneously increasing his potential payout if all events are correctly picked.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ ab'Progressive Parlays'. SPORTSBETTING.NET site. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  2. ^Stephenson, Vince. 'Progressive Parlay Bet'. SportsBet.com site. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  3. ^'Progressive Parlays'. Belmont.com site. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  4. ^'Progressive Parlays'. Predict Em site. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  5. ^'Education: Applied Mathematics'. Time. December 1, 1947. Retrieved 27 January 2010. It was a 'progressive parlay' based on mathematical probability, some intricate slide-rule calculations, and two assumptions: that any roulette wheel follows a pattern of its own, and that good or bad luck runs in streams.
  6. ^'Math Student Finds $300 Plus Reno is $13,000: U. of C. Graduate and Pal 'Take' Town at Roulette'. Chicago Daily Tribune. November 20, 1947. p. 22. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  7. ^Moe, Al W. (October 2008). The Roots of Reno. BookSurge Publishing. p. 177. ISBN978-1-4392-1199-1. Retrieved 26 January 2010.
  8. ^Baer, Robert M. (1972). The Digital Villain. Addison-Wesley. p. 65. ISBN0-201-00442-9. OCLC297591.
  9. ^'A Look at Progressive Parlays and Picket Pools'. SB Pal. Retrieved 17 September 2013.
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