There are 85 or 32768 outcomes.
If you roll a fair, six sided die 100 times, you would expect to see each face one out of six times, or about 17 times. Statistically, however, you will see variation in the results, because 100 trials is far, far too small to even come close to the theoretical distribution.
Possible outcomes of a single dice are 6 ( 1,2,3,4,5,6) So if 5 such dices are rolled then the number of possible outcomes are 6 mulitiplied by 6 five times. 6x6x6x6x6x6=46656 possible outcomes.
The theoretical probability of rolling a 5 on a standard six sided die is one in six. It does not matter how many times you roll it, however, if you roll it 300 times, the theoretical probability is that you would roll a 5 fifty times.
1:6 or (theoretically) 50 times
25/36
200.
18 outcomes
well its all 50% no matter what
10
When you toss a 6-sided die 7 times, each toss has 6 possible outcomes. Since the tosses are independent, you can calculate the total number of outcomes by raising the number of outcomes per toss to the power of the number of tosses: (6^7). This equals 279,936 possible outcomes.
-78
It is 0.1962
6
Depends if the dice is bias then you an not have an answer if it is fair then you times 6 by 3 which = 18 so if you want three different outcomes then 3/18 which is simplified to 1/6 of a chance!
36 times. But also, you might get the opposite result 36 times.
It is 0.99999406 approx, or pretty nearly a certainty.
It depends on the number of sides and how many times you roll it.