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%
The probability of rolling an even number is 1/2.
When you throw a dice there is always 6 chances of getting a number; therefore the numbers greater that 4 are: 5 and 6 (2 options) in total there will be 2/6 chances will simplifies to 1/3
6 chances Actually, it is 1/4. Chances of an even number on the first die are 1/2, and chances on the second die are 1/2; 1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4
Zero. If you roll five dice, you cannot get six 6s.
The probability of rolling the same number on five dice is (1/6)4, or about 0.0007716.
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%
The probability of rolling an even number is 1/2.
Opposite faces always add to 7. Two is opposite five.
When you throw a dice there is always 6 chances of getting a number; therefore the numbers greater that 4 are: 5 and 6 (2 options) in total there will be 2/6 chances will simplifies to 1/3
No.
We'll assume standard six-sided dice. The first die rolls... well, whatever it rolls. It doesn't really matter what the specific number is. The second die can come up any of six different ways. One of those ways is with the same number as the first, the other five are different. So the chances of rolling two dice and getting the same number on both is 1/6.
if you multiply the number of rolls you did you will get the answer
4 out of 12 chances if each dice had 6 sides. 2 out of 6 chances to simplify it.
Assuming you are rolling a six-sided dice, it is 1/3 for one dice and 2/3 for two dice.
6 chances Actually, it is 1/4. Chances of an even number on the first die are 1/2, and chances on the second die are 1/2; 1/2 x 1/2 = 1/4
A 1 in 6 chance.