Understanding the purpose, scope, and limitations of TrackTheWheel as an educational research platform.
⚠ TrackTheWheel cannot and does not guarantee any winnings, profits, or improved gambling outcomes. Roulette is a game of chance with a built-in house edge. No system, tool, or analysis can overcome this mathematically.
TrackTheWheel is a data analytics platform that monitors live roulette table feeds and presents statistical information about observed spin outcomes. It is designed for people who wish to study the mathematical and statistical properties of roulette — including probability distributions, variance, the law of large numbers, and the appearance (and limitations) of patterns in random data.
The platform is appropriate for: statistics students, probability researchers, casino industry professionals, data analysts interested in real-world random number generation, and curious individuals seeking to understand the mathematics behind roulette.
TrackTheWheel is NOT a betting system and must not be used as one.
TrackTheWheel does NOT provide financial advice, investment advice, or gambling strategy advice.
TrackTheWheel does NOT claim that any pattern, trend, alert, or analytical output represents a prediction of future outcomes.
TrackTheWheel does NOT guarantee improved results, reduced losses, or any financial benefit from using the Service.
TrackTheWheel is NOT affiliated with, endorsed by, or partnered with any casino operator.
European roulette has 37 pockets (numbers 0–36). The probability of any single number winning on any given spin is exactly 1/37, regardless of what has happened on previous spins. This is a mathematical certainty, not an approximation.
The house edge on a European roulette wheel is 2.7%. This means that over a large number of bets, a player can expect to lose 2.7% of all money wagered — regardless of which numbers they bet on, which strategy they use, or what historical data they consult. This edge is immutable and cannot be overcome by any analytical tool.
The concept of “gambler’s fallacy” — the belief that a number is “due” because it hasn’t appeared recently — is a well-documented cognitive bias with no mathematical basis. Each spin is entirely independent of all previous spins.
TrackTheWheel’s analytics — including hot/cold number displays, sector frequency maps, and dealer pattern data — are purely descriptive of observed historical data. They do not imply or predict anything about future spins.
Observe the law of large numbers in action — how distributions converge toward expected values over thousands of trials.
Understand and measure variance and standard deviation in real-world random event sequences.
Study whether human dealers exhibit measurable mechanical patterns over sessions — a legitimate academic question.
Understand live casino table operations, provider ecosystem, and the nature of live-streamed RNG events.