1 in 6. Basically dice 1 can roll any number So the odds are that dice 2 has the same number as dice 1, or 1 in 6
No.
The odds of rolling 6 out of 2 consecutive dice is 100/25.
The odds of rolling any specific number in one roll of one die is 1 in 6. Each die is unrelated, so the odds of rolling the same specific number using six dice in one roll is 1 in 6 to the 6th, or 1 in 46,656.
The probability is 5/12.
The odds of rolling any double number is 1:36
1 in 6. Basically dice 1 can roll any number So the odds are that dice 2 has the same number as dice 1, or 1 in 6
No.
The odds of rolling 6 out of 2 consecutive dice is 100/25.
The odds of rolling any specific number in one roll of one die is 1 in 6. Each die is unrelated, so the odds of rolling the same specific number using six dice in one roll is 1 in 6 to the 6th, or 1 in 46,656.
The probability is 5/12.
I believe the odds are about 60:1
5 out of 6
The odds of not rolling a 1 or 2 with two dice is 35 in 36. The odds of doing that 25 times in a row is (35/36)25 or about 0.4945Note: The odds of not rolling a 1 is zero, so the answer degraded to the odds of not rolling a 2.===================================Opinion #2:-- There are 36 possible outcomes when 2 dice are rolled.-- Only one of the outcomes is a 2.-- So the probability of NOT rolling a 2 with 2 dice is 35/36 .-- In 25 consecutive rolls, the probability of never rolling a 2 is (35/36)25 = 49.45% .-- The 'odds' are 1,011 to 989 against it.
How many sides? If 6, 50%.If 20, 80%
The probability of rolling two even numbers on two standard dice is 0.52, or 0.25.
The odds of rolling any number in one roll of one die is 1 in 1. The odds of rolling the same number in one roll of one die is 1 in 6. Each die is unrelated, so the odds of rolling a pair using two dice in one roll is 1 in 1 times 1 in 6, or 1 in 6.Now, look at the second pair of dice. The odds of rolling any number other than a number on the first pair is 5 in 6. The odds of rolling the same number in one roll of one die is 1 in 6. Each die is unrelated, so the odds of rolling a pair using two dice in one roll, not the pair in the first roll is 5 in 6 times 1 in 6, or 5 in 36.Now, look at the third pair of dice. The odds of rolling any number other than a number on the first two pairs is 4 in 6. The odds of rolling the same number in one roll of one die is 1 in 6. Each die is unrelated, so the odds of rolling a pair using two dice in one roll, not one of the first two pairs is 4 in 6 times 1 in 6, or 4 in 36.To compute the total odds of rolling three pairs of numbers using 6 dice, simply multiply these odds together. That is 1 in 6 times 5 in 36 times 4 in 36, or 30 in 7776. Reducing that to lowest common fraction, you get 5 in 1296.(This calculation assumes that the three pairs are different. If two or three of the pairs are allowed to be the same, the computation is different.)