If you roll two dice and add the numbers together, you might get 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, so there are eleven possibilities total. One is not included in this list because that would mean the first dice would roll a one and the second dice would roll a...zero? That's impossible!
The probability is 7/36.
i think you roll all 10 of these dice at once and it is similar to farkle
For a single roll of a pair of fair dice, the answer is 1/36.
The odds are 1 in 36 that you will roll a sum of 2 in a single roll of two fair dice.
None. Two ordinary dice can only sum to 12 and so you cannot roll a 36.
One die. Two dice.
That depends on what kind of dice you are rolling and how many of them you roll. If you roll two 6-sided dice once, the probability of getting the number 100 is exactly zero. You cannot get a 100 on one roll of two 6-sided dice. Other dice and different numbers of them may yield different probabilities.
Of the 36 possible combinations rolling two dice there are 2 combinations that add up to 11 so the odds are 18:1
The probability of rolling a sum of 12 in a single roll of two dice is 1 in 36, or about 0.0278.
33,33333...%
144