If you don't even formulate your questioncorrectly it is unlikely that anybody's going to answer.
The answer depends on how many the six are out of.
one in six 1:6 six sides, one of which is a six same odds for any of the numbers
If the numbers on the cube are one through six, you have a one out of six chance of rolling any of them. If they are double-digit numbers, your chance is zero.
There are 7 choices for the first place. That leaves 6 choices for the second place and that leaves 5 choices for the third place. So seven times six times five is 210 This assumes each number can only be used once. Now lotteries where the player chooses numbers, say, six numbers out of 40, usually arrange the numbers in ascending order so a lot of combinations are eliminated. For example, 123, 231, 321, 312, 132,213 are all possible combinations of three digits but to the lottery machine they are all the same as 123 In lotteries where a number is preprinted on the ticket, that number retains its original order so 123 is not the same as 213 or 321 Numbers games can be based on some unknown number like the number of letters in the headline of tomorrow`s newspaper. what ever the game, the odds are usually against the player.
Odds of rolling ONE six - 6:1 Odds of rolling TWO sixes - 36:1 Odds of rolling two sixes, SIX times - 216:1
One in Six
6 if order doesn't matter
14.2%
-4
The first of the three can be any one of 6 numbers. For each of these choices, the second of the three can be any one of 5 numbers. For each of these choices, the third of the three can be any one of 4 numbers. So there are (6 times 5 times 4) ways to pull three numbers out of the six available = 120 ways. If you don't care what order you wind up with ... meaning, if 1-3-5 and 5-1-3 and 3-1-5 are all the same thing as far as you're concerned ... then there are only 20 different groups of three that you can wind up with.
The odds of rolling a word with the keyword "dice" on each side of a standard six-sided dice is 1 in 46,656.
1/n, where n is the number of faces on the dice. For example, if they are six sided dice, then the odds will be one in six.