Message text Well, I vaguely recall some nutter flipping a quarter some outrageous number of times, keeping track of it, and reporting that Heads came up more often than tails, or vice-versa, I don't recall which.
Back to the dice, yes, everytime you roll, there is an equal chance that any number may come up. So we have to think outside the box a little here. If you look at a succession of rolls, such as looking at the play of multiple games through multiple turns. The Central Limit Theorem is being violated by the random number generator as there are an awful lot of 1s being rolled. I should be seeing more rolls in the 3s and 4s versus 2s and 5s and especially more than 1s or 6s.
This is math, I'm not making this stuff up. Let me explain. A Theorem in math is something that can be tested over and over and over. I was taught that the only thing from making them a Law is there is no 100% proof, even though every observation made ever, suports the Theorem. I'm trying to do this in a constructive manner. I've never taken a statistics course, so I'm asking for a STATISTICIAN for confirmation that my assumptions are correct and that someone in charge of the game can log the dice roller and see if it follows these rules. If it truly does obey the Central Limit Theorem, I will acquiesce. If not, I would request the powers that be look into updating this component of the game.
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