The below described drawings are presented to illustrate some possible examples of the invention.
Modern roulette wheels have an optical sensor or other type of sensor in each possible ball position that detects the outcome after each spin of the wheel. There are 38 numbers (0, 00, and 1-36) in American roulette wheels and 37 numbers in European roulette wheels. Such roulette tables are available commercially, such as from TCS John Huxley.
A CPU in the table, coupled to the sensors, generates a number code associated with each stopped ball position, and the corresponding number is then shown on the display 16 at the table. The display 16 is typically an LED display or a backlight display that displays, for example, the last 10 numbers selected by the wheel. The quantity of numbers displayed may be programmable.
The number codes are also transmitted via the network interface 18 to a central server and stored in a memory, and such numbers may be later accessed by a suitable computer addressing the appropriate memory locations. Payout and pay-in data may also be transmitted via the network if RFID betting chips are used.
Additional details about roulette tables may be found in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,042,810 and 6,352,260, incorporated herein by reference.
As described below, the existing roulette game is supplemented by a totally different game that does not affect the conventional roulette game and does not incur any additional cost for the casino.
Certain types of players do not wish to sit at the roulette table or bet on every outcome. The below game is a simple low-pressure game that makes use of the roulette outcomes.
In one embodiment, the printed ticket 28 contains the name of the game, a list of the selected numbers, the start time and date of the game, the roulette table number, the bet amount, a paytable, and a verification code. The verification code contains an encrypted code, in the form of a bar code, that uniquely identifies the ticket and the accurate betting data. This code is also stored in the game terminal or the casino network server. When the player later cashes out using the ticket 28, the terminal compares the verification code on the ticket to the stored code to make sure the ticket is valid and has not already been cashed.
The player takes the ticket 28 and typically walks to the selected roulette table to watch the next 15 selections of numbers. A synchronized clock may be displayed at the roulette tables so the player knows when the supplementary game starts. The supplementary game may start, for example, two minutes after the player is issued the ticket 28 from the terminal 20. The numbers selected at the roulette table 10 are given time stamps and transmitted to the terminal 20 in any manner, such as through the casino network (via network interface 18), via an RF transmission, or via a direct wire coupling.
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After the 15 numbers have been selected by the roulette wheel 12, the player then inserts her ticket 28 into the game terminal ticket slot 30 for scanning, or the ticket is scanned by an external laser scanner, so that the terminal 20 can verify the ticket and determine the award to be paid to the player. The terminal 20 then prints and issues a cash-out ticket through slot 30, which is a conventional cash-out ticket used in cashless gaming (referred to as ticket-in/ticket-out). The cash-out ticket may be inserted into any slot machine or any other apparatus (including terminal 20) for obtaining credits, or the ticket may be redeemed for cash at the cashier's station. Any won credits may be used to play another game via terminal 20 without obtaining a cash-out ticket.
In another embodiment, the original ticket 28 issued by the terminal 20 is redeemable at the cashier's station if the station has means to verify the ticket 28.
In other embodiments, the player may select any amount of numbers (N) to compare with the actual roulette selected numbers (M), and the paytable may determine the award based on a percentage of numbers guessed correctly. The player-selected numbers may be compared to the same amount of numbers selected by the actual roulette wheel 12 (N=M) or compared to a greater amount of numbers selected by the actual roulette wheel 12 (N<M). An additional award may be based on the player correctly guessing the order of numbers.
Various other embodiments are possible. A progressive jackpot may be accumulated from a percentage of the bets, and one or more levels of progressive jackpots may be awarded for certain percentages of matches.
There may be a tournament mode, where many players play using the same set of roulette wheel 12 numbers at the same time. Whoever has the most number of matches wins the tournament. The tournament would be publicly announced some time before the game. The tournament may cover multiple sequential games.
In one embodiment, the game terminal 20 is located proximate to an associated roulette table, and a hard wire connection between the terminal CPU 34 and table CPU simplifies the transmission of the roulette wheel numbers to the terminal 20.
In one embodiment, the player has the option of selecting 10 numbers or allowing the terminal's computer 34 to randomly select the numbers for faster throughput.
The player may enter numbers via terminal 20 for any number of separate games, with any start times designated by the player. The player can also use the numbers from multiple roulette tables in a single game.
The roulette wheel 12 may also be automated, so no operator at all is needed to carry out the game. Such a wheel can select 3000 numbers per day.
The terminal 20 may instead be hand-held, similar to the hand-held tablet 50 of
Although a roulette wheel 12 is the preferred device for generating the numbers, the numbers may also be generated by any other ongoing game that is independent of the supplementary game and transmitted to the game terminal 20. Such game may be craps (if the dice outcomes are recorded), cards (where the suit and rank of a certain dealer's cards are the random numbers), or keno (the keno RNG transmits the numbers to the game terminal 201). A device may read the dealt cards using an RFID sensor that reads RFID chips embedded in the cards and transmits the cards to the game terminal. For dice, the outcomes may be entered by the dice table attendant, or the dice outcomes may be electrically sensed by the table.
The term numbers used herein may refer to any type of symbol. The supplementary game programmer is free to create any rules and awards based on the random numbers selected during the table game (e.g., roulette), which can make the supplementary game much more interesting than the table game.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skill in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention in its broader aspects and, therefore, the appended claims are to encompass within their scope all changes and modifications that fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 2006 010 128.4 | Jun 2006 | DE | national |