solipurple.blogg.se

Final fantasy 11 pling a mule
Final fantasy 11 pling a mule








final fantasy 11 pling a mule

After finding that, I avoided those two chests and for a period of several months, was able to get through 9/10 Troves without triggering the mimic. I "found" the pattern by failing several times and realizing the mimic was typically one of two chests. I had this happen to me and it lasted for a while. How could there be a “better odds” pattern in a completely randomized coin flip-style event? Genuinely asking, not trolling It wouldn't be the first time I've known or known of someone who tried playing off their luck as skill. I know some swear by it but as I said, could be just some very lucky chap trying to find some scientific explanation for it happening. Oversimplification or not, I got your point. Their recent adjustment to giving people Belligerent Bang messages about LTs on the board and rewarding a guaranteed gold/rainbow box for 8 straight correct guesses is their way of coaxing you into testing your luck even further. But since the minigame doesn't give you any direct hints about the mimic, there's nothing you as a player can do to alter your strategy to improve your winnings. It would be different if the game either opened a box for every correct box you opened or gave you hints as to how close to your last opened box the mimic is, which would help you eliminate the chances of picking a mimic yourself. At least that's the way your mind breaks down how you approach this event. Either it is a 1/mimic or it's 2/"Not" (N, T, LT, but essentially one other possibility). It's really 10% probability, but what I mean to say is, the location of the mimic is always hidden from the player, so from his perspective, every selection made is essentially a sudden-death type of choice. I shouldn't oversimplify it by calling it a coin flip, as that's not mathematically accurate to Trove scenario.










Final fantasy 11 pling a mule