I should probably let sleeping dogs lie, but...
As someone who's played a lot of games for a lot of years, I've effectively tried this out millions of times. You can roll a dice three times and get a six each time (1/216). On the third throw, if you give me 200-1 odds against getting a six, I will make a fortune out of you, provided we play the game long enough. You can get the same suit for all five board cards in Texas Hold'em (0.000495198, if my maths is correct). The chance of that final card being the same suit is 9/48, though, and if you give me odds better than about 4-1, I'll take you to the cleaners again.
In my worst ever bad beat, someone got the one card in the pack to improve their three of a kind to a four of a kind, when I had a better three of a kind. With seven cards known, she hit the one card in the pack (1/45) to beat me. If you consider how often that particular card would come up when I also had a better three of a kind, the odds become ridiculous, but if you play enough poker it can and will happen- I've had it happen to me. And on the turn of the next card, it's still 1/45, it's not (chances of us both having three of a kind * 1/45).
kcbrett, you've asked us to 'experiment ourselves'; well any of us who've played enough games and gambled enough _have_ experimented ourselves. People win money by gambling when they know more than the people they're playing against (whether the house, through card counting, or other players, in a game like poker). They do not make money by looking for an unlikely sequence and then betting their life savings against it happening again. In fact, gamblers throughout history have lost their life savings through exactly this method.
As someone who's played a lot of games for a lot of years, I've effectively tried this out millions of times. You can roll a dice three times and get a six each time (1/216). On the third throw, if you give me 200-1 odds against getting a six, I will make a fortune out of you, provided we play the game long enough. You can get the same suit for all five board cards in Texas Hold'em (0.000495198, if my maths is correct). The chance of that final card being the same suit is 9/48, though, and if you give me odds better than about 4-1, I'll take you to the cleaners again.
In my worst ever bad beat, someone got the one card in the pack to improve their three of a kind to a four of a kind, when I had a better three of a kind. With seven cards known, she hit the one card in the pack (1/45) to beat me. If you consider how often that particular card would come up when I also had a better three of a kind, the odds become ridiculous, but if you play enough poker it can and will happen- I've had it happen to me. And on the turn of the next card, it's still 1/45, it's not (chances of us both having three of a kind * 1/45).
kcbrett, you've asked us to 'experiment ourselves'; well any of us who've played enough games and gambled enough _have_ experimented ourselves. People win money by gambling when they know more than the people they're playing against (whether the house, through card counting, or other players, in a game like poker). They do not make money by looking for an unlikely sequence and then betting their life savings against it happening again. In fact, gamblers throughout history have lost their life savings through exactly this method.