The table sits in a tilted three-quarter view, which is the first thing you notice. Most demo roulette wheels go for the flat top-down angle, but Habanero's build leans the felt toward you like you're approaching a real table from the player side. The wood cradle holding the wheel is dark and polished, the chrome cone work at the center catches whatever ambient light the renderer fakes, and stacked chip racks rise behind the wheel in neat columns. It reads as a proper casino floor table rather than a flat mobile port.
The wheel itself is a standard single-zero European layout. Thirty-seven pockets running 0 through 36, alternating red and black with the green zero, house edge of 2.70%. That's where the 97.30% RTP figure comes from. A 98.65% certified variant exists at select operators where the math is loosened, though the demo here runs on standard rules. Straight-number bets pay 35:1 and the rest of the table follows European convention: splits at 17:1, streets at 11:1, corners at 8:1, six-lines at 5:1, dozens and columns at 2:1, and the even-money outside bets at 1:1.
What separates this build from the absolute baseline implementation is the racetrack overlay sitting along the top right. Above the standard number grid runs a curved bet strip labeled Orphans, Thirds of the wheel, and Neighbours of Zero. Those are the English translations for the three classic French call bets: Orphelins, Tiers du Cylindre, Voisins du Zero. Each one is a preset cluster of numbers tied to physical positions on the wheel rather than the felt, so placing a Voisins bet drops chips on the 17 numbers nearest zero in one click rather than chip-by-chip. Most basic European Roulette demos skip this layer entirely.
Inside bets run from 0.50 to 50 per chip, outside bets from 5 to 250, and the total stake cap per round sits at 5,000. A chip denomination indicator with up and down arrows sits at the bottom edge for switching values on the fly. The action bar carries Clear Bets, Undo, and Play in that order. A bet-history grid on the left edge logs prior outcomes as a small stack of pixel readouts. Useful if you're running pattern-based strategy, even though every spin is statistically independent. The favorites system lets you save repeat layouts, which speeds things up if you keep returning to the same Voisins-plus-corner combination. No live dealer chatter, no animated croupier, and the ball physics use canned audio samples rather than procedural sound. This is an official Habanero partner release on Respinix.