Casino gaming. In Chance (Spring 2005), University of Denver statistician R. C. Hannum discussed casino gaming and the laws of probability. Casino games of pure chance (e.g., craps, roulette, baccarat, and keno) always yield a “house advantage.” For example, in the game of double-zero roulette, the expected casino win percentage is 5.26% on bets made on whether the outcome will be either black or red. (This percentage implies that for every $5 bet on black or red, the casino will earn a net of about 25 cents.) It can be shown that in 100 roulette plays on black/red, the average casino win percentage is normally distributed with mean 5.26% and standard deviation 10%. Let x represent the average casino win percentage after 100 bets on black/ red in double-zero roulette.
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