Originally Posted by Zoidberg
This means that statistically it is completely randomized. Expecting an even distribution of rolls is a human fallacy, and has nothing to do with actual statistical probability. Running 11 ones in a row is fully within normal behavior for a completely RNG based dice for example. The reason is simlpe; every roll is counted on its own, meaning the 11th time you roll the dice it is still 5% chance for a "1". The odds doesn't decrease for every roll (unless you have the Karma dice on).

In fact, a good sign that a dice actually is correctly implemented is if you do not get an even spread at all unless you count over 2000 rolls or so.

dude im sorry but there is nothing normal bout rolling 11 ones in a row. do you understand the statistical probability of rolling 11 1's in a row? that 1 - .0000000000000005. thats essentially 1 in 100 trillion chance. if you think thats normal you clearly dont understand odds. I frequently roll 1's at a rate probably triple that of statistics and long odd should allow. which means there is a weighted number to dice and they are not anywhere near true odds.

honestly just reading your entire statement lets me know that you dont understand long odds at all. I'll explain: Long odds states that even though every roll is an individual chance to roll any give number, over the course of time all numbers will statistically even out to the percentages over time. so on a D20 every number has a 5% chance to roll. which means short term you will have the chance to roll streaks. however long odds say no matter how long the streaks are on the short term in the long run every number will eventually run out to have come up 5% of the time.

in the 500 or so hours i have on the game i can guarantee the number of 20's I've rolled if FAR FAR fewer then the number of 1's. there has to be a weighed system in place and I would really like it removed.

Last edited by Janri76; 13/03/24 05:54 PM.