Clarie Dubois

Clarie Dubois

Publisher

Biography

Claire's intrigue with roulette began during a summer in Nice, France, where the glitz of the casinos and the spin of the wheel captured her heart. As her skills sharpened, she discerned a need for an authentic, strategic online roulette guide, birthing RouletteSeal. Claire resonates with the belief: "Roulette is a blend of grace and grit; every spin tells a story."

Cookie policy
2023-03-02

Cookie policy

Cookie Policy for CasinoRank
Effective Date: 20230222

Terms and conditions
2020-05-12

Terms and conditions

When using the RouletteSeal website, please note that you agree to our terms and conditions and you should make yourself aware of the following:

Responsible gaming
2020-05-12

Responsible gaming

Always Gamble Responsibly

Privacy policy
2020-05-12

Privacy policy

At RouletteSeal we are very mindful of the privacy you are entitled to and should receive when visiting and using this site. We acknowledge that gathering information from our users is important but equally, protecting your needs and ensuring your information is secure and used properly is very important too. In this Privacy Policy, we aim to outline the methods that RouletteSeal use to collect, maintain and then use the information that is provided by our users.

Disclaimer
2020-05-12

Disclaimer

RouletteSeal is a third-party, affiliate website. It is not owned or operated by any RouletteSeal gambling company and does not provide any gambling services. What we provide is an informational portal, including reviews and recommendations of online gambling sites, strategic gameplay materials and other forms of advice for our visitors.

Gambling addiction
2020-05-12

Gambling addiction

"Research to date shows that pathological gamblers and drug addicts share many of the same genetic predispositions for impulsivity and reward seeking. Just as substance users require increasingly strong hits to get high, compulsive gamblers pursue ever riskier ventures. Likewise, both drug addicts and problem gamblers endure symptoms of withdrawal when separated from the chemical or thrill they desire. And a few studies suggest that some people are especially vulnerable to both drug addiction and compulsive gambling because their reward circuitry is inherently under-active ---which may partially explain why they seek big thrills in the first place.\n\nEven more compelling, neuroscientists have learned that drugs and gambling alter many of the same brain circuits in similar ways. These insights come from studies of blood flow and electrical activity in people's brains as they complete various tasks on computers that either mimic casino games or test their impulse control. In some experiments, virtual cards selected from different decks earn or lose a player money; other tasks challenge someone to respond quickly to individual images that flash on a screen but not to react to others.\n\nA 2005 German study using such a card game suggests problem gamblers---like drug addicts---have lost sensitivity to their high: when winning, subjects had lower than typical electrical activity in a critical region of the brain's reward system. In a 2003 study at Yale University and a 2012 study at the University of Amsterdam, pathological gamblers taking tests that measured their impulsivity had unusually low levels of electrical activity in prefrontal brain regions that help people assess risks and suppress instincts. Drug addicts also often have a listless prefrontal cortex.\n\nFurther evidence that gambling and drugs change the brain in similar ways surfaced in an amazing group of people: those with the neurodegenerative disorder Parkinson's disease. Characterized by muscle stiffness and tremors, Parkinson's is caused by the death of dopamine-producing neurons in a section of the midbrain. Over the decade's researchers noticed that a remarkably high number of Parkinson's patients---between 2 and 7 percent---are compulsive gamblers. Treatment for one disorder most likely contributes to another. To ease symptoms of Parkinson's, some patients take levodopa and other drugs that increase dopamine levels. Researchers think that in some cases the resulting chemical influx modifies the brain in a way that makes risks and rewards---say, those in a game of poker---more appealing and rash decisions harder to resist.\n\nA new understanding of compulsive gambling has also helped scientists redefine addiction itself. Whereas experts used to think of addiction as dependency on a chemical, they now define it as repeatedly pursuing a rewarding experience despite serious repercussions. That experience could be the high of cocaine or heroin or the thrill of doubling one's money at the casino.\n\n\”The past idea was that you need to ingest a drug that changes neurochemistry in the brain to get addicted, but we now know that just about anything we do alters the brain\” says Timothy Fong, a psychiatrist and addiction expert at the University of California, Los Angeles.\n\n\”It makes sense that some highly rewarding behaviors, like gambling, can cause dramatic [physical] changes, too.\”"

Best Online Roulette
2020-05-12

Best Online Roulette

In recent times, online roulette has been gaining in popularity among many casino gamers. The reason for this includes the convenience of playing the game online, anywhere and at any time provided the player has access to the internet. Additionally, unlike other casino games, online roulette does not require the player to adhere to a strict rulebook. The game is, therefore, open to all to play whether one has prior experience or not.