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Edited by jimmycricketwin5298 at 2017-9-8 00:44
Devvoke2 replied at 2017-9-7 10:30 ![]()
no bad example (even tho i just put that in a comment great minds think alike)
try rolling a dice ...
I have done like 50 AP stats assignments where we had to toss a coin 100 times and roll a dice 100 times. Even with 50 times it will start to normalize... I've done the very same trial since I was in the 6th grade even until college right now. If you toss a coin or roll a die 100 times, it will definitely normalize. Maybe not exactly 50/50, but it will be around 40/60 60/40. Even if it is random, random numbers will still follow the law of probability.
If you roll a die, you will get a random number from 1 to 6. You have a 1 in 6 change in getting a certain number. Therefore, in 100 die rolls, you will get the number you want 16.6667% of the time.
Random number WILL normalize. It's been proven since da vinci times my dude
The fact that the amount of stones you get isn't the same possibly means it is scripted, or the data was smudged as you can get stones from boxes, SA, cycle events, etc..
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