The chance of rolling a 1 on a six-sided die is 1 in 6. To find the probability of rolling a 1 twice in a row, you multiply the probabilities of each event: (1/6) * (1/6) = 1/36. Therefore, the probability of rolling a 1 twice in a row is 1 in 36, or approximately 2.78%.
50 times or above
1/6
If it is a fair die, the probability is 5/6.
The probability of rolling a 4 with a single six-sided die is 1/6. To find the chance of rolling a 4 three times in a row, you multiply the individual probabilities: (1/6) × (1/6) × (1/6) = 1/216. Therefore, the chance of rolling a 4 three times consecutively is 1 in 216, or approximately 0.46%.
Each die has a 5/6 chance independent of the other.
The chance of rolling a 6 twice in a row, on a six-sided die, is 1 in 36 or 2.78%. The number of possible different results for rolling a six-sided die twice is 6 squared (6 times 6), or 36, therefore the probability of getting any one of the possible results is 1 out of 36.
The probability is 1/6.
You have 1 out of 6 chance of getting a two.
50 times or above
1/6
If it is a fair die, the probability is 5/6.
The chance is one in 216 (6^-3).The probability of rolling a five once is 1/6. Rolling a five again, on the same die or another, will still have a 1/6 chance. Therefore, the probability of the event occurring twice is 1/36 (1/6^2). Three times has a probability of 1/216 (1/6^3), and so on. It does not matter what die is used, as long as it has six sides.The probability p of rolling a number x times consecutively on an s sided die isp=s^-x
1 chance in 12 tries
The probability of rolling a 4 with a single six-sided die is 1/6. To find the chance of rolling a 4 three times in a row, you multiply the individual probabilities: (1/6) × (1/6) × (1/6) = 1/216. Therefore, the chance of rolling a 4 three times consecutively is 1 in 216, or approximately 0.46%.
Each die has a 5/6 chance independent of the other.
The probability of rolling a 3 is 1/6.
on a 6-sided die theres a 1/6 chance