Sequence Breaker Roulette System

The Kavouras Roulette System, a method devised with chaos and disorder in mind!  But does it matter?  After all the object of playing roulette is to win … isn’t it!

Let’s get right into this.  Unlike the majority of betting strategies, the Kavouras roulette system relies on these imperative rules to achieve a profit:

To cover sufficient volumes of numbers to induce a regular strike rate and thus keep the variance low.

Include a chaotic betting pattern to reflect the erratic and disordered conditions of roulette.

To ensure a stake would induce a profit whatever the outcome of the spin, and therefore reduce any reliance on introducing a Martingale approach to the betting structure.

The Kavouras Numbers

The outlay includes a total of 20 numbers to cover a substantial proportion of the table and to ease any losing runs.  Additionally, the play becomes less impulsive with such a tactic. 

For single zero roulette (European roulette) these are the numbers the Kavouras roulette system covers and their respective profit margin:

  • A single unit on 0-1-2-3 (corner = 1 unit profit)
  • 2 units on 31-32-33-34-35-36 (double street = 4 units profit)
  • A single unit on the following 5 splits: 8-11, 13-14, 15-18, 17-20, 27-30. (per split profit = 10 units)
  • Number covered = 20
  • Lowest profit = 1 unit
  • Highest profit = 10 units

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Kavouras Roulette System spreads numbers evenly across the European Roulette Table.

These two visual representations of the Kavouras roulette system depict both the table and wheel layout. In my judgement I like the concept of the Kavouras method but the notion that it harnesses a chaotic approach to the game is slightly perplexing. In other words, many system developers use the table layout (above image) for chip placement. They don’t consult the wheel layout which sometimes illustrates a different angle.

As we can see in the below image, the Kavouras strategy covers groups of numbers on the wheel which accidentally primarily appear to cover the Orphelin and Tier segments.

Only two chips (number 18 and number 2) are alone on the wheel, while the remaining chips are distributed in groups or pairs. One can argue about the validity of this layout. It will suit some players and isolate others. I’m personally indifferent to it because of the mixed success I’ve had operating the Kavouras strategy in the past.

Unlike above the Kavouras Roulette System tends to group together the chips on actually roulette wheel.

The Objective of the Kavouras Roulette System

In essence the strategy’s objective is to be deliberately chaotic. But roulette is seldom simple! While the system itself doesn’t represent any orderly or structured betting outlay it does appear to have unintentionally produced this effect.  If the player seeks structure and formation a simple outside betting option may be more suitable.

Instead the Kavouras approach is to reflect the anarchy of the wheel.  In a fair game of roulette, predictability is futile, nothing is certain and no prophecy is helpful.  It’s this methodology that underpins the criteria of the Kavouras roulette system.

It’s a cool strategy to use and does manage to slip between safety and risk with equal precision.  I’ve used it a couple of times, often with success, often without!