Why Does Roulette Add Up To 666

I heard this on the radio yesterday and it kind of took me back a little.

There are 38 numbers on an American roulette wheel and there are 37numbers of a French roulette wheel, both wheels add up to 666
www.bookmakersinc.co.uk...
www.omg-facts.com... Is this by chance or is it because money and gambling is evil. I personally hate gambling and I don'teven play the lottery. Although I have dabbled in shares which is just as bad
Many people of course get addicted to gambling and it wrecks many lives.

Mar 13, 2018
Why Does Roulette Add Up To 666

An easy way to obtain the answer is to multiply 37 by 18. What is the justification for this quick method? Imagine that you have numbers 1 to 36 in a row. Now the last and first numbers, 36 and 1, added together equal 37. The 2 and the 35, 37. The Numbers of the Beast. The roulette wheel (both 0 and 00 versions) is sometimes nicknamed the ‘Devil’s Wheel’. Partly due to its propensity to send players to hell (or at least, their credit ratings), the numbers on a wheel add up to 666 – the number of the Beast. Yep, adding 1+2+3+4+5.+36 equals 666. There's hidden numerology in many customs and parts of culture all around the world. 666 is a prevalent number, many people believe it's associated with the devil, but there are many who believe it represents the universe and consciousness and can be traced back all the way to ancient egypt, and possibly before.

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Why Does Roulette Add Up To 666 Video

The Devil’s Game: Roulette

Why Does Roulette Add Up To 666 Download

Perhaps one day, while gambling away your children’s inheritance in some nameless casino someone told you that Roulette was invented by Blaise Pascal, a French mathematician and Catholic theologian who lived in the 16th century. Maybe you heard he devised the wheel while trying to create a perpetual motion machine. That part of history may be all well and good, but there’s perhaps a darker side of Roulette’s beginnings that’s not talked about much in “proper” circles. A history that doesn’t begin anywhere near Paris or the 16th century, for that matter. A history that might involve (cue dramatic music)…the Devil?!?!