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
-- If you roll one single 6-sided cube . . . probability = 331/3%, odds = 1 in 3, or 2 to 1 against it. -- If you roll a pair of 6-sided cubes . . . probability = 27/9%, odds = 1 in 36, or 35 to 1 against it.
No.
It is 1/3.
-4
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
-- If you roll one single 6-sided cube . . . probability = 331/3%, odds = 1 in 3, or 2 to 1 against it. -- If you roll a pair of 6-sided cubes . . . probability = 27/9%, odds = 1 in 36, or 35 to 1 against it.
On a regular, six-sided die, the highest number you can roll is a 6.
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.
No.
It is 1/3.
-4
If the dice is 6 sided, the chances of rolling each number is about 17% (100/6) If the dice is 4 sided, the chances of rolling each number is 25% (100/4) Similarly, 8 sided = 12.5% 10 sided = 10% 12 sided ≈ 8% 20 sided = 5%
If you rolled 5 six-sided dice, there would be 6 to the power 5 = 7776 choices.
The odds are 1 in 36 that you will roll a sum of 2 in a single roll of two fair dice.
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.