1 Min
Rounds
Explore colour trading with a free demo, clear beginner guidance, app access, and practical strategy content designed for players who want to understand how colour trading works before they play.
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1 Min
Rounds
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To play Colour Trading, you pick a colour (Red, Green, or Violet), a number (0–9), or a Big/Small bet before the round timer ends. When the timer hits zero, a result number appears. If your prediction matches the outcome, you win a payout based on the multiplier for that bet type. Each round is independent — no round influences the next.
Before you place your first bet, it helps to understand what you’re betting on. Colour Trading is a colour prediction game where each round produces a single number from 0 to 9. That number carries a colour — Red, Green, or Violet — and falls into either the Big (5–9) or Small (0–4) range.
Your job is to predict some aspect of that result before the timer locks.
Most beginners start by guessing which colour comes next. That’s a reasonable place to begin. But there’s more structure to the game than it first appears, and understanding that structure is what separates players who make informed decisions from those who just guess.
Every round in Colour Trading has a countdown timer. While the timer is running, the betting window is open — you can place your bet. When the timer approaches zero, the window locks. No new bets are accepted after this point.
This matters because:
Get comfortable with the timer in a few rounds before worrying about strategy. Timing your bets feels awkward at first; it becomes automatic quickly.
This is the most common starting point. You choose Red, Green, or Violet.
| Colour | Payout | Numbers It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Red | 2x | 2, 4, 6, 8 (and partial on 0) |
| Green | 2x | 1, 3, 7, 9 (and partial on 5) |
| Violet | 4.5x | 0 and 5 only |
Red and Green each cover four numbers cleanly. Violet covers only two — which is why it pays more than double what Red and Green do. Numbers 0 and 5 are shared between Violet and a colour, so a colour bet on Red when the result is 0 returns a reduced payout, not a full 2x.
Most beginners stick to Red or Green when starting out. The odds feel familiar — roughly even — and the payout is straightforward.
You pick a single number from 0 to 9. If that exact number appears, you win 9x your bet.
Higher risk, significantly higher reward. Most experienced players use number bets as smaller side bets alongside a primary colour bet, rather than as their main stake. As a beginner, it’s worth understanding these exist — but don’t make them your primary bet type until you’re comfortable with how rounds work.
| Bet | Covers | Payout |
|---|---|---|
| Big | 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 | 2x |
| Small | 0, 1, 2, 3, 4 | 2x |
Big/Small is the simplest bet in the game. Each covers exactly five numbers, the payout is even, and there’s no colour-number mapping to think about. This is where I’d recommend starting if you find the colour system confusing at first.
The tradeoff: it’s also the least nuanced bet type. Once you understand the colour-number relationship, colour bets give you more angles to work with.
That’s one round. Repeat this a few times before increasing your bet size.
If you want to do this with zero financial risk first, the platform offers a demo mode where you can play full rounds using virtual credits. Running 10–15 demo rounds before your first real bet is worth the time.
Here’s what a ₹100 bet returns across different outcomes:
| Bet Type | Bet Amount | Payout (Win) |
|---|---|---|
| Red or Green | ₹100 | ₹200 |
| Violet | ₹100 | ₹450 |
| Number (exact) | ₹100 | ₹900 |
| Big or Small | ₹100 | ₹200 |
The loss in every case is your ₹100 stake. The game doesn’t deduct additional fees from a losing bet — you lose what you wagered.
Not the bets themselves — the bet sizing.
New players typically open with a bet amount they’d be uncomfortable losing in the first ten rounds. That’s too much. The first few sessions aren’t for profit; they’re for learning the rhythm of the game — when to bet, what the colour-number map means, and how the timer behaves.
If you lose your first round, the natural impulse is to increase the next bet to “recover.” That impulse is how a short learning session turns into a significant loss. Set a per-round amount you’re genuinely comfortable losing, and keep it consistent regardless of the previous result.
This is the single most transferable rule from experienced players to beginners. Experienced colour traders aren’t just better at predicting outcomes — they’re better at not reacting to short-term swings.
Yes. Each round’s result is generated independently. There’s no pattern to exploit, no “streak” that will continue, and no colour that is “overdue.”
This isn’t a pessimistic framing — it’s accurate. Understanding that the game is random changes how you approach it. You stop looking for patterns that don’t exist and start focusing on what you can actually control: your bet size, your session limits, and whether you’re playing on a platform you’ve verified.
On the last point — if you’re just starting out and haven’t yet checked whether the platform you’re using is legitimate, here’s how to identify a fake colour trading platform before you deposit anything.
The best way to confirm you understand how the game works is to play a few rounds before any real money is involved. Demo mode gives you actual rounds — same timer, same bets, same result display — using virtual credits.
Use it to get comfortable with the timing, test the different bet types, and build a feel for the pace of the game. Then, when you move to real bets, you’re not figuring out mechanics at the same time as managing your money.
Try the demo before your first deposit — it’s the one thing I’d tell every new player.
You win by correctly predicting the outcome of a round — whether that’s the colour, the exact number, or the Big/Small category. Your bet amount is multiplied by the payout ratio for that bet type. There’s no guaranteed way to predict outcomes; every round is independently random.
Big/Small bets are the simplest starting point — each covers half the numbers and pays 2x. Red and Green colour bets work similarly. Avoid number bets (9x) as a primary bet until you’ve played enough rounds to understand the pace of the game.
It depends on the platform. Some platforms are browser-based; others offer an app. If you’re downloading an app, only use the official source from the platform’s verified website — not third-party APK links. How to identify a fake colour trading platform covers what to check before installing anything.
Yes. Most legitimate colour trading platforms offer a demo or practice mode using virtual credits. Use this before committing real money — it lets you learn the mechanics without financial risk.
Use the demo to understand colour trading rounds, explore strategy pages, and move to the app when you are ready for a faster playing experience.