Well, you may be aware that a "streak" is occurring simply by recalling the past X dice results, but you truyly never know when the streak will end. It really can only be called a "streak" once the streak ends (in hindsight). If for example, you place the 6 for 12 and the next three rolls happen to be a six, you may state in that moment, there appears to be a "streak" of sixes being rolled. You may adjust your bets accordingly (for example, full press of the place bet for the number 6. But, the very next roll may not be a six...or worst, the very next roll may be a seven. Only after the "pattern" of results ends can you look back and say "wow, that was a streak of three sixes".thnick wrote: ↑Sun Jun 16, 2019 12:00 pm And it is said you never know when you are in one. If you use regression and are in the money quickly after the
first couple of throws, you are definitely ready to catch one both money wise and psychologically. After all, if you are even or ahead when even a short roll is going on, you don't lose anything. I just use the Heavy press system and pull money. Or if I'm feeling more conservative, same bet, same bet. Either way you make bucks, right?
As far as "initial steep regression" strategies go, its as good as any other betting strategy, when the results favor the bets you happen to have on the layout. Initial steep regressions can be a wonderful thing except when you have a PSO, or a very short roll (perhaps 2 or 3 numbers followed by a seven).
In fact, if your initial steep regression is based on one or more large place numbers that you intend to steeply regress after a hit, a long roll of "outside numbers such as 2,3,11,12", followed by a seven would be just a bad as a PSO outcome.
Under the right circumstances, any betting strategy can be a "winner" or a loser". Heck, say with a bank roll of $150, I plan on consistently booking a "$5 boxcars" prop for the next 30 rolls of the dice. As long as the "12" is rolled once in that series of 30 prop bets, I will have at least "broken even". If a twelve happens to be rolled a few times early on in my planned strategy of "30 X $5 12 prop bet", I can opt to stop booking that bet, or even ride out a total of 30 trials because at this point, I am going to be ahead if I only book that single bet a total of 30 times.
Now mathematically, in terms of both probability, and house edge, the prop bet 12 is among the worst bets on the layout (true odds would being paying players 36 to 1, but house only paying 30 to 1 on a win), with a HE of 16.67%