Uh-Oh! Quadruple Zero Roulette Hits Las Vegas Strip

  • Quadruple zero roulette raises the casino house edge
  • Bonus wheel tempts players with rare jackpot multipliers
  • Las Vegas casinos trade fairness for spectacle and entertainment

It was probably only a matter of time, but “quadruple zero” roulette has landed in Las Vegas.

Quadruple zero roulette, Palazzo Las Vegas, Bonus Wheel Roulette, four zeros, House edge odds, Casino games
Bonus Wheel Roulette, a new electronic table game from Interblock, above, has made its debut at the Palazzo, complete with a fourth zero. (Image: Vegas Advantage/YouTube)

As if three-zero roulette wasn’t enough of an abomination, the Palazzo’s new “Bonus Wheel Roulette” game comes with four—yes, four – zeros, plus the titular bonus wheel that offers the distant promise of a 500× jackpot.

In the new game from manufacturer Interblock, the green zero pockets have been replaced by four jewel‑colored “gem” spaces, as first reported by Vegas Advantage. Land on any of those, and a second wheel springs to life, offering multipliers that can skyrocket your payout. But don’t let that cloud your judgment: the underlying math hits hard.

Edge of Reason

According to Vegas Advantage, bets on the numbered slots (1–36) carry a toe-curling 10% house edge, while wagering on gem pockets yields a steep 9.25% advantage for the house.

Contrast that with European single‑zero roulette, which is available at a handful of Las Vegas casinos and typically holds just a 2.7% edge. Meanwhile, the standard American double‑zero version clocks in at 5.26%. Even the controversial triple‑zero format offers players a comparatively better rate of 7.69%.

Bonus Wheel Roulette offers some of the lousiest odds in Las Vegas, but not the worst. That dubious honor goes to Big Six Wheel, where the house edge ranges from 11.11% up to a staggering 24%, depending on the bet. Or keno, where it typically falls between 20% and 40% — sometimes even higher. And of course, the house edge in slots is typically 5% to 15%, and in some cases even worse.

Armed with this information, it’s a wonder that anyone would give Bonus Wheel Roulette a spin, except that most casual gamblers value entertainment over probability theory. In short, they like flashy lights, spinning wheels, and would rather chase that rare, massive payout over steady, modest returns.

Zero Creep

Triple‑zero (or “3‑zero”) roulette made its debut in Las Vegas in October 2016, when The Venetian quietly introduced it under the name “Sands Roulette.” The casino simply added a third zero slot, often marked with the Sands logo, in addition to the usual 0 and 00. By mid‑2018, the format had begun to spread across the Strip, where it is now common.

The natural next step, quad-zero roulette, arrives amid a wave of game reinventions and hybrid electronic tables all designed to refresh gameplay and jack up casino hold.

While a four-zero format seems extreme, it chimes with the current industry strategy of trading fairness for spectacle and entertainment. Keep it flashy, keep it marginally worse for the player, and keep the flow of coins moving.

Philip Conneller
Philip Conneller Senior Reporter

In Philip Conneller’s eight years with Casino.org, he has covered the gaming industry from Las Vegas to Macau and everything in between. He currently focuses his coverage on gaming law, white-collar crime, global money laundering, tribal gaming, politics, and regulation.

Philip was the original features editor for poker’s Bluff Magazine and editor for Bluff Europe, which he helped launch. His writing has also been featured in ESPN, Forbes, Time Out, The Sun, and The Daily Star, as well as iGaming Business, eGaming Review, and numerous other industry news and tech websites.

His news stories for Casino.org/news have been linked by The Washington Post, The Daily Mail, People Magazine, and Jimmy Fallon's Tonight Show, among many others.

Philip once won $20,000 with 7-2 off-suit. He has been reprimanded for unwittingly playing Elton John’s piano on two separate occasions on both sides of the Atlantic.

He became a writer because he is a lousy pianist.

Philip lives outside London with his wife and children, where he spends his time agonizing about Arsenal FC.

Contact Philip at philip.conneller@casino.org.

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  • LL
    Lucky Larry August 26, 2025
    Anyone that goes to Las Vegas and considers "gambling" to be part of the overall entertainment portion of their trip, deserves what they get on… Anyone that goes to Las Vegas and considers "gambling" to be part of the overall entertainment portion of their trip, deserves what they get on the Strip. I'm guessing that this probably represents at least 90% of the tourists. The interesting thing is that these same people will complain about the high prices and all of the extra fees, but will happily park themselves at a 6:5 Blackjack table or a Quad-Roulette machine and be completely unaware that they're getting more of a royal screwing by those things than they're getting screwed by all of the fees. For that small slice of savvy gamblers that are staying on the Strip (probably in order to maintain marital harmony), a $20 cab, Lyft, or Uber ride over to the Palms, Gold Cost, Palace Station, or South Point, is money well spent.
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