How do they differ?
Derived roads track patterns within outcomes rather than the outcomes themselves, which separates them fundamentally from primary displays that log what each hand produced. One records facts, the other analyses them.
Primary displays like the bead plate and big road show banker, player, and tie results in sequence. Every entry maps directly to a completed hand, and reading the board tells a player exactly what happened and when. Derived roads on a เว็บบาคาร่า work one layer removed from that record, comparing whether recent columns on the big road match or break the patterns set by earlier ones.
Nothing about the underlying cards changes between the two views. Same shoe, same results, different lens applied to the same data. Players who understand both read the felt with considerably more context than those who treat the derived boards as decorative. Derived roads produce symbols rather than direct results, which is the clearest surface difference a new player notices first.
What primary displays show?
Primary displays present a direct, unfiltered record of every hand in the current shoe, organised by result type and sequence.
Bead plates log each outcome in a grid, moving left to right, filling top to bottom within each column. Banker fills one colour, player another, tie and pair dots attach to whichever result they accompany. Big roads group consecutive banker or player runs into columns, so a streak of five banker wins stacks visibly as a single tall column rather than five separate entries. Both boards update the instant a hand settles, and neither applies any interpretation to what it records. A player reading either board sees history without commentary, which suits anyone wanting raw data over pattern analysis.
How do derived roads operate?
Derived roads generate symbols by asking a specific question about big road column behaviour, then marking whether the answer is consistent or not.
Each derived road asks its question at a different offset, comparing columns separated by one, two, or three positions depending on the road type. A match between the compared columns produces one symbol, a break produces another. Big eye boy compares adjacent columns. Small road skips one column between comparisons. Cockroach road skips two. All three run simultaneously, updating with every new hand, and their symbols accumulate in their own separate grids beside the primary boards.
- Big eye boy – Compares the current column against the one immediately preceding it.
- Small road – Skips the most recent full column and compares against the one before that.
- Cockroach road – Reaches back two columns further still, identifying longer structural patterns.
Each road starts populating only after enough hands exist to support its comparison, which is why derived boards often sit partially empty early in a shoe.
Practical reading differences
Primary boards suit players wanting a simple record of recent momentum. A long banker column communicates a streak without any interpretation needed. Derived roads suit players hunting structural regularity across the shoe, since their symbols reveal whether the pattern of runs and breaks is itself consistent.
Neither board predicts what comes next. Both reflect only what has already happened, and the shoe draws on fixed probability regardless of what any display records. Misreading a derived road’s offset produces conclusions the board never contained, which is why primary displays attract new players and experienced ones consult both.