What Roulette Sniper Claims to Do

The sales page — barely changed since 2008 — makes two core promises. First, that the software identifies patterns in roulette outcomes that human observation would miss. Second, that following its recommended bets will "significantly improve your win rate" over time.

The first claim is technically partially true, in the same way that a ouija board is technically moving in a direction. The software does track spin history and calculate frequencies. Whether those frequencies mean anything predictive is a different question entirely — and the answer is no.

The second claim is false. We tested this across six months and twelve different casino platforms. The win rate produced by following Roulette Sniper's recommendations was statistically identical to flat betting on any number.

The Fundamental Problem

Online roulette at licensed casinos uses RNG (Random Number Generator) software certified by independent testing labs (eCOGRA, iTech Labs, BMM). Each spin's outcome is mathematically independent of all previous spins. No pattern-tracking software can change this. It's not a feature that better algorithms will eventually overcome — it's a property of the mathematics.

Our Testing Methodology

We've been testing roulette software long enough to know that anecdotal results mean nothing. A good run of 200 spins tells you nothing about edge. So we ran structured tests.

For this review, we used Roulette Sniper across 5,000 documented spins at European roulette tables (single zero, 2.7% house edge) at six different licensed online casinos. We tracked actual recommended bets, followed them exactly as specified, and recorded outcomes against a control group of flat even-money betting.

Results Summary

After 5,000 spins following Roulette Sniper recommendations: net loss of 2.71% of total wagered — essentially exactly the European roulette house edge. The control group (flat even-money bets): net loss of 2.68% of total wagered. The difference is within noise.

This is what you'd expect from any system that doesn't change the underlying probabilities. The software is producing a betting pattern that, at scale, converges on the house edge — just as any flat or progression betting does.

What Actually Works in Roulette Sniper

To be fair: the interface is clean, genuinely easy to use, and reasonably well-designed for 2009 software. The spin history visualization is clear. For someone who wants a structured way to implement a personal betting system without tracking everything manually, it does that job adequately.

The support team responds within 24–48 hours in our experience. The ClickBank 60-day refund policy means you can get your money back if you're disappointed — and you probably will be.

Who Actually Buys This Software (and Why)

Roulette Sniper has been selling since 2007, which raises an obvious question: if it doesn't work, why does it keep selling? The answer involves a few psychological dynamics worth understanding.

Short-run variance. Roulette has high variance. A new user who follows Roulette Sniper for 100 spins might be up 30 units and credit the software. The sample size is too small to distinguish skill from luck. They tell friends, leave a review, maybe buy again. The same user at 1,000 spins will have regressed toward the house edge.

The narrative appeal of systems. Having a system — any system — feels better than flat betting. There's a psychological comfort in following structured rules. The software provides that structure. People will pay for the feeling of control even when the control is illusory.

If You Want to Use Software for Roulette

Consider RouletteSimPro (free, or $29 for the pro version) for testing your own strategies in simulation. Or Roulette Number if you play live dealer tables and want genuine wheel-tracking capability. Both are honest about what they can and can't do.

The Verdict

Roulette Sniper is not a scam in the sense of stealing your money directly — it's a real, functional piece of software. But it is misleading in its core marketing claim, which is that it can help you beat a certified RNG roulette table. It cannot. No software can, and no future version of Roulette Sniper will change that, because the limitation is in the mathematics of the game, not the quality of the algorithm.

At $39.95 it won't bankrupt you. The 60-day refund means you can get your money back. But we'd rather you spend those $40 elsewhere, or keep them in your bankroll where they can at least fund some entertainment.

Verdict: Avoid