
The Greeks are known for their aptitude in mathematics and physics, as well as in many other areas of skillful study. Archimedes was the forerunner of modern science, along with other famous self-made scientists of his time. Archimedes, however, wasn't born during Blaise Pascal's time. If he was, he would have analyzed the roulette wheel and would have come up with a system that resembled a lot like Stefano Hourmouzis' Genuine Winner Primordial and Custom Variants.
Clueless? This so-called system is an analysis of the
roulette wheel - the physics, the visual ballistics and the whole science separating one variant called primordial and another called custom. If it still sounds nebulous and geeky, wait till you see how efficiently it works. In Stefano's roulette analysis fashion, you need to show him the wheel and he would make an analysis of the 300 spins every few weeks. Of course, as the roulette wheel wears out, you get to receive a different kind of pattern courtesy of Stefano's analysis. These patterns may be dictated before you
spin the wheel (primordial) and after (custom).
There's no chance you're going to be a millionaire if you are playing in different casinos and at different roulette tables each time. The trick is to get a particular set of roulette wheels and dictate a pattern by the physical analysis of the spins. It sound awfully troublesome for a beginner, and for a seasoned roulette player, it's just as complicated. But, if you're seeking for a way to beat the roulette without "having to steal" from it, as Einstein would quip, then analyzing the physics of the wheel and the ball is the way to go.