RouletteSniper Review started in 2008 as a personal project. I'd spent two months and a few hundred dollars testing roulette prediction software after seeing a convincing-looking ad, and I was frustrated enough by the results to write about them publicly.

The original site was three pages. It covered Roulette Sniper, Roulette Killer, and a now-defunct tool called Casino Master Pro. The verdict on all three was the same: interesting interface, claims that don't survive contact with statistical analysis.

Seventeen years later, the verdict on most tools in the category is still the same. The interfaces have improved. The marketing has gotten more sophisticated. The underlying mathematics has not changed, because it can't.

Who Writes This

My name is R. Halstead. I'm not a professional gambler. I have a background in statistics and spent several years working in risk analysis before spending an embarrassing amount of time testing gambling software as what I can only describe as an expensive hobby.

I'm helped occasionally by two contributors who prefer not to be named publicly — one with a background in software engineering (which helps when evaluating algorithm claims) and one who plays live dealer roulette seriously enough to have opinions worth hearing on the casino selection side.

How We Test

We purchase every tool we review with our own money. We do not accept free review copies, because the incentive to be kind to a product you received for free is real even when you're trying to be objective.

For software reviews, we test at minimum 500 documented spins following the tool's recommendations, and typically 2,000+ for tools that make significant claims. We run control tests (flat betting or random betting) alongside to establish a baseline. We document results in spreadsheets that we keep but don't publish in full because they're genuinely tedious to read.

For casino recommendations, we maintain accounts at every site we list and make regular test withdrawals to verify payout times. Any site that delays a legitimate withdrawal without justification is removed from our recommendations.

Affiliate Disclosure

We earn commissions from some casinos and some software products linked on this site. This is how the site covers its costs.

We have turned down commissions from products we couldn't recommend. We list software as Avoid when the evidence demands it, regardless of whether the developer offers affiliate terms. If our financial relationships were controlling our verdicts, we would have fewer Avoid ratings — we have nineteen of them.

We don't control what we rank. If a tool earns a 3.1, it earns a 3.1. Commission rates are not a factor in scoring.

What We Won't Do

We won't tell you that any software can help you beat a certified RNG roulette table, because it can't. We won't recommend a casino that has documented payout problems, regardless of commission. We won't soften a negative review because a developer complained.

If that sounds like an obvious standard, spend some time looking at the other sites in this niche.