Angelika System

Angelika System

Xavi Torrez
Xavi Torrez iGaming analyst & Roulette specialist
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The Angelika System is a variation on the D’Alembert progression, developed in the 1960s by German player Angelika Tepperwein. The principle is simple: increase your bet by one unit after a loss, decrease by one unit after a win, and play three even-money positions simultaneously. Tepperwein reportedly used the system to win consistently across European casinos — though as with every roulette strategy, the math behind why it works is more interesting than the legend.

Complex chip pattern across multiple inside bets visualizing the Angelika roulette betting system
The Angelika System spreads identical bet adjustments across three even-money positions — Red/Black, Odd/Even, and High/Low — creating coverage without committing to a single outcome.

Quick facts

  • Type: Negative progression (D’Alembert variant)
  • Bet positions: Three even-money fields simultaneously
  • Risk level: Low to medium
  • Bankroll needed: Medium
  • House edge: Unchanged at 2.7% (European) or 5.26% (American)

How the Angelika System works

The Angelika System combines two ideas: the D’Alembert’s gentle one-unit adjustment after each spin, and the coverage logic of betting three even-money positions at once. Here’s the exact procedure:

  1. Choose your starting bet (for example, €10) and your unit size (€1).
  2. Place three identical bets on different even-money fields: Red/Black, Odd/Even, and 1-18/19-36.
  3. After each spin, evaluate each of the three bets independently. Increase any bet that lost by one unit (€1), decrease any bet that won by one unit.
  4. Continue until you reach your target profit, or until your bankroll forces a stop.

Worked example: five spins

Starting bet €10 per position, unit size €1. Total starting risk: €30 across all three positions.

SpinR/B betO/E betHi/Lo betSpin resultCumulative
1€10€10€1017 (R, O, Lo) — 2 wins+€10
2€9€9€114 (B, E, Lo) — 1 win+€10
3€10€10€1022 (B, E, Hi) — 3 losses—€20
4€11€11€119 (R, O, Lo) — 3 wins+€13
5€10€10€1030 (R, E, Hi) — 2 wins+€23

When the Angelika System works — and when it doesn’t

Strengths

  • Slow progression keeps bet sizes manageable, even after losing streaks.
  • Three simultaneous positions create more frequent partial wins than single-position systems.
  • Easy to track mentally — single-unit adjustments require no complex calculation.

Weaknesses

  • Like every progression system, Angelika doesn’t change the underlying house edge — only the variance.
  • A long losing streak across all three positions can drain a bankroll faster than the slow progression suggests.
  • Zero outcomes still cost you all three bets simultaneously — the system has no protection against the house edge.

Verdict

The Angelika System is one of the gentler progression strategies — better suited to short sessions with modest bankrolls than to high-stakes play. If you understand the D’Alembert system, you already understand most of what Angelika does, with the added wrinkle of three-position coverage. For a comparison with other progression methods, see our complete strategy overview or the related flat betting approach for players who prefer not to chase variance at all.

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