Trouble is players don't have access to how much money is being placed on each number, or even how many players are at the table playing.
You can look at the stats, up to the last 500 spins and see the dispersion over the wheel. It would be relatively easy to keep a record of each 500 spins and build some stats from those. In my experience the dispersion across all the numbers is fairly consistent.
Yep, it all evens out if you stretch your scope wide enough.
In fact, this also provides a consistent explanation for the phenomenon of somebody betting on a certain area for an entire afternoon without the ball dropping there once, only to be FLOODED with those numbers as soon as they give up and remove their chips.
Evo has to make the average appear normal again.
I've seen this occur far, FAR more times than is natural or explicable by other means.
It's even become an in-joke in the chat. If a number drops four or five times in a row, people comment that somebody must have just removed their chips.
Turns out this usually is exactly the case. Rage quits then ensue.
My worst experience with that is when I spent
1.5 hours betting on the zero area non-stop without the ball dropping there a single time.
Then I suddenly had
seven bets in a row rejected. Each of these spins landed in the zero area.

Then the "mysterious" network problem vanished again, and the next three bets were allowed again, all three landing outside the zero area.

Then another
six successive bets were rejected, again each of them landing inside the zero area.


Instead of suffering a few hundred euros in losses, I would have made thousands in profit.
(Needless to say, my network monitors didn't show any latency or hiccups whatsoever all this time.)
I suppose, because I wasn't giving up on the zero area, they had to force something in order to keep their averages from becoming overly suspicious. So they simply blocked my thirteen winning bets, while allowing the scores of losing ones.
P.S. This particular story, as an isolated case, could just about be chalked up to a very, very weird coincidence.
But, look at this thread, it's just one incredibly weird coincidence in an OCEAN of incredibly weird coincidences, occurring over the course of nearly two years... every single last one of them to the advantage of the casino; not one of them to the player.
See also my 22 spins betting on the left half of the wheel, as I mentioned earlier.