Generally speaking, no. But there are a million different models made. So some may from time to time. As a whole, they are reliable.Do revolvers jam, much? Russian roulette with a magazine approaches 1:1 odds of bang.
Generally speaking, no. But there are a million different models made. So some may from time to time. As a whole, they are reliable.Do revolvers jam, much? Russian roulette with a magazine approaches 1:1 odds of bang.
How 'bout 142-chamber revolvers?Generally speaking, no.
That's a lot of hallways with revolving doors.How 'bout 142-chamber revolvers?
Does it actually exist?How 'bout 142-chamber revolvers?
I originally suggested it as a "thought experiment" to help conceptualize that 1/142 is not that unlikely.Does it actually exist?
If you are willing to play russian roulette with a gatling gun I do not think the thought experiment worksGatling gun?
That one wouldn't regard a 1 in 142 chance of dying as a low risk of dying.
My joke was that the physics of such a revolver (once it moved out of the thought experiment stage) would mean that it would inevitably jam, so your risk of death would be 0 in 142. And that you would regard as a low risk of dying.
You people are hopeless!
Your argument is not that strong though. Just because there are far better ways of giving people lots of shots without reloading than a revolver does not mean they could not build one. If they can make chips with tolerances at the edge of quantum effects, and they could make the below in the olden days, I am not convinced that if you were rich enough to pay people to play russian roulette you could not make a working 142 shot revolver.That one wouldn't regard a 1 in 142 chance of dying as a low risk of dying.
My joke was that the physics of such a revolver (once it moved out of the thought experiment stage) would mean that it would inevitably jam, so your risk of death would be 0 in 142. And that you would regard as a low risk of dying.
You people are hopeless!
Cookies take up cheesespace!Do they make 142-chamber revolvers much? (Was my point) (No, and for a reason) (And that reason is?) (Because that's would require a crazy-sized cylinder relative to the handle, trigger and barrel) (And that sized cylinder would therefore jam) (What's your evidence for that?) (The non-existence of 142-chamber revolvers)
You need a cookie, Farm Boy.
But that would depend on the algorithm - I assume it is established that those are the odds. Maybe civ (intuitively, this would seem highly likely, since you tend to lose with much stronger units 1/3 or 1/4 times in practice...) has a variation which also takes into account the result of the previous few turns of combat?Also, what do you mean "tens of times"? In Civ 4, that gives you the combat odds, I wonder how many times I have attacked with combat odds of 99.3% (1/144 chance of losing)? I reckon it is between 10^4 and 10^5, BICBW.
I think the RNG has been pretty well proven to be random and not that.But that would depend on the algorithm - I assume it is established that those are the odds. Maybe civ (intuitively, this would seem highly likely, since you tend to lose with much stronger units 1/3 or 1/4 times in practice...) has a variation which takes into account the result of the previous few turns of combat?
What does "random" mean in this context? Pure randomness isn't possible afaik in a computer setting.I think the RNG has been pretty well proven to be random and not that.
In the normal computer world you are right, they are pseudorandom rather than random. There are some specifications they have to have, things like the distribution of the numbers and the length of the sequence until it repeats I think. I definitely means that they do not change the odds under the hood as a result of previous combats.What does "random" mean in this context? Pure randomness isn't possible afaik in a computer setting.