Charts

Colour Trading Charts & Patterns: How to Read Them

Learn how to read colour trading charts, spot patterns, and use colour prediction charts to make smarter decisions without falling for myths.

Guides

8 min

6 Club होम पेज इस नॉलेज क्लस्टर का मुख्य आधार है। वहां से आप सभी प्रमुख पिलर्स और अपडेट्स तक पहुंच सकते हैं।

होम पेज देखें

हर 6 Club लेख एक स्पष्ट क्रम का पालन करता है: वादा, स्टेप्स, चेकलिस्ट और सपोर्ट पाथ्स। स्टेप्स लागू करें, फिर अपनी लेजर रखें ताकि अगला सेशन शांत और ज्यादा प्रेडिक्टेबल हो।

Grid history

Charts show frequency, streaks, and gaps at a glance.

Three patterns

Alternation, streaks, and gap fills describe history.

No guarantees

Each round is independent; patterns do not predict the future.

What colour trading charts show

A colour trading chart is a visual record of past results. Each row or cell represents one round, showing the winning colour and sometimes the associated number. Charts help players see frequency, streaks, and gaps at a glance rather than trying to remember dozens of past rounds.

Most platforms display charts in a grid format with red, green, and violet marked in different colors. Some advanced charts also show big-small results, timestamps, and period numbers. The key is to treat the chart as historical data, not a crystal ball.

  • Charts show a visual history of winning colours.
  • Grid formats make frequency and streaks easy to see.
  • Advanced charts may include size, time, and period data.
  • Use charts as historical records, not predictions.

Common patterns to recognize

Three common patterns appear in colour trading charts: alternation, streaks, and gap fills. Alternation is when colours switch back and forth between two options, like red-green-red-green. Streaks are three or more identical colours in a row. Gap fills occur when a colour that has been absent for many rounds suddenly appears.

None of these patterns predict the future. They are simply descriptions of what has already happened. The statistical reality is that each round is independent. However, recognizing patterns helps you avoid the emotional mistake of assuming a colour is due just because it has not appeared recently.

  • Alternation: colours switch back and forth.
  • Streaks: three or more identical colours in a row.
  • Gap fills: an absent colour returns after many rounds.
  • Patterns describe history, not the future.

How to use charts responsibly

The best way to use a colour prediction chart is for self-discipline. Before you play, review the chart and decide on a strategy. For example, you might decide to follow the alternation pattern for ten rounds and then stop. Having a pre-planned strategy prevents impulsive decisions.

Another responsible use is bankroll tracking. Mark your wins and losses directly on the chart or in a companion log. This gives you a clear picture of whether your strategy is actually profitable over time. If it is not, you can adjust rather than continuing blindly.

  • Decide your strategy before reviewing the chart.
  • Follow the strategy for a fixed number of rounds.
  • Track wins and losses in a companion log.
  • Adjust or stop if the strategy is not profitable.

Chart myths to avoid

The most dangerous chart myth is the gambler's fallacy: the belief that a colour is due because it has not appeared recently. In reality, each round is independent. A colour that has been absent for 20 rounds has the same probability on round 21 as it did on round 1.

Another myth is that complex pattern analysis software can predict outcomes. These tools simply repackage historical data with fancy visuals. They cannot change the mathematical independence of each round. Save your money and focus on bankroll management instead.

  • Gambler's fallacy: a colour is never due.
  • Each round is mathematically independent.
  • Pattern software cannot predict random outcomes.
  • Focus on bankroll management, not chart magic.

चेकलिस्ट

अगले सेशन से पहले इसे लागू करें

Treat charts as historical records, not prediction tools.
Learn to recognize alternation, streaks, and gap fills.
Decide your strategy before you start playing.
Track wins and losses honestly.
Avoid the gambler's fallacy and pattern software scams.