MONOPOLY Roulette (Evolution): More Bonuses, 5,000x Cap, and the 19:1 Catch
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Launching today, June 3, 2026, MONOPOLY Roulette is Evolution’s third major attempt at integrating the famous Hasbro license into a live casino format.
Instead of a money wheel (MONOPOLY Live) or a bingo machine (MONOPOLY Big Baller), the vehicle to get you to the bonus round is now a standard European Roulette wheel. However, Evolution has heavily altered the underlying math to change how much time you actually get to spend on the 3D board.
Here is exactly how the mechanics stack up against previous entries and what the new math model means for your bankroll.
The Base Game Trade-Off
In standard European Roulette, a Straight Up bet pays 35:1. In MONOPOLY Roulette, that payout is cut nearly in half, dropping to 19:1.
This is the exact same suppressed payout model Evolution used in Lightning Roulette and Red Door Roulette. The casino is actively holding back base-game funds to finance the bonus rounds. To trigger those bonuses, a slot machine randomly assigns MONOPOLY symbols to 3 to 7 numbers on the grid each round.
Because missing a bonus number is a common frustration in these multiplier-roulette games, Evolution added Chaser Bets. Placing chips on the Bonus Chaser or Chest Chaser spots automatically drops a Straight Up bet on whichever numbers are selected by the slot machine. It is a quality-of-life feature that prevents you from having to blindly guess the winning numbers.
Extending the 3D Board: 9 Dice Rolls
The real draw of this franchise has always been the 3D board game phase, and this is where MONOPOLY Roulette differentiates itself from its predecessors.
In the 2019 original, MONOPOLY Live, players were strictly capped at 2 or 4 dice rolls. In the bingo-style sequel, MONOPOLY Big Baller, Evolution bumped that up slightly to 3 or 5 rolls.
MONOPOLY Roulette pushes the limit to a potential 9 dice rolls. When the slot machine spins at the start of the round, it assigns between 5 and 9 rolls to the bonus numbers.
This is the core takeaway of the game. More dice rolls drastically increase your odds of making a full lap around the board and passing 'GO', a mechanic which immediately doubles all the multipliers currently on the board. The traditional penalties still carry over exactly as they did in the older games: landing on Income Tax reduces your total bonus win by 10%, Supertax reduces it by 20%, and going to Jail requires you to roll a double to escape.
If you manage a long run across those 9 rolls, the board multipliers cap out at 5,000x your bet.
A Separate Pick-and-Win Bonus
Evolution also used this release to separate the "Chance" and "Community Chest" mechanics.
In older titles, landing on a Chance card usually just applied a flat multiplier to your next spin. Here, the live host randomly throws up to five Community Chest symbols onto the roulette grid. If the ball lands on one, it triggers a completely separate pick-and-win mini-game. Players have a few seconds to pick one of three hidden cards, revealing a multiplier that ranges from 20x to 300x.
The Takeaway
MONOPOLY Roulette is built specifically for players who felt the 2-roll and 4-roll limits of MONOPOLY Live ended the bonus phase too quickly. The math model is straightforward: you accept heavily reduced 19:1 payouts in the base game in exchange for the chance to take up to 9 rolls on the 3D board. It is the most volatile entry in the series, but it finally gives players the extended board-game runs they have been asking for.
Read Next
If you prefer bingo mechanics over table games, check out our breakdown of MONOPOLY Big Baller. It trades the roulette wheel for a bouncing-ball machine and 5x5 bingo cards, requiring you to complete lines to trigger 3 or 5 rolls on the 3D board.

