tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1298399641711237003.post5453801196105859160..comments2024-03-26T11:47:07.063+00:00Comments on BigLee's 'Miniature Adventures': Dice on Fire!BigLeehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00960213980906190335noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1298399641711237003.post-3580356993704495352010-05-10T14:23:59.756+01:002010-05-10T14:23:59.756+01:00Nah, definatelty high rollers. I mean a few dozen ...Nah, definatelty high rollers. I mean a few dozen rolls <b>must</b> be a statistically significant sample!<br /><br /><i>[whispers to dice] Don't listen to the bad man, I think your special.</i>BigLeehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00960213980906190335noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1298399641711237003.post-15435593157737231932010-05-10T11:06:30.857+01:002010-05-10T11:06:30.857+01:00It's a bad workman that blames his tools (for ...It's a bad workman that blames his tools (for good or ill!) ;)<br /><br />I think you are a long way (a few tens of thousands of dice rolls) from demonstrating any genuine bias in your dice. <br /><br />Besides the biggest single factor biasing almost all dice is the amount of materialremoved from each face to form recessed numbering - but that would mean that every dice was biased towards rolling whatever numbers are opposite those faces with the least material removed.<br /><br />Post your results of several hundred million dice rolls covering multiple materials, markings, orientation of faces, rolling surfaces, corner and edge profiles, and double blinded rolling techniques from different gamers and maybe ... just maybe THEN I'll believe your dice is special enough to make a difference ;)Brandlinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04353605539351885407noreply@blogger.com