MasterRoulette

The Fibonacci System in Roulette: Theory vs. Reality

Can a famous mathematical sequence help you beat the casino? We analyze the Fibonacci system applied to roulette and its real consequences.

📐 What is the Fibonacci System?

The Fibonacci system is based on the famous number sequence where each number is the sum of the two preceding ones: 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21... In roulette, it’s used to gradually recover losses by betting according to this progression.

🔧 How It Applies to Roulette

The player bets following the sequence. If they lose, they move forward to the next number. If they win, they move back two steps. The idea is to recover losses without doubling as aggressively as in the Martingale.

Example: Bet 1 → lose, bet 1 → lose, bet 2 → lose, bet 3... and so on. If you win, you go back in the sequence trying to secure a profit.

📉 Mathematical Reality

📊 Conceptual Simulation

With 8 consecutive losses, you’ll have bet: 1 + 1 + 2 + 3 + 5 + 8 + 13 + 21 = 54 units. If you win on the 9th bet (34 units), you’ll have gained only 1 net unit. And if you don’t win… the sequence continues: 55, 89, etc.

🚫 Risks of the Fibonacci System

The system may seem safe at first, but it’s just a mathematical illusion. Long losing streaks are more common than they seem, and they can deplete your bankroll or hit the table limit before the expected win arrives.

💡 Conclusion

The Fibonacci system is slower but not safer. It still doesn’t change the math of roulette. In the long run, no progressive betting system can beat the house edge.

🔁 Try Fibonacci in Practice

Simulate the behavior of the Fibonacci system step by step. Track your balance, table limits, and observe how the game evolves.

Try strategy: Go to simulator →

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