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jammyjames wrote:Basically, when issuing a card a random territory on the map will be selected for the card. In your case you just happened to gain the same territory card in a short space of time.
We all know how 'random' the dice are, the cards are just trying to follow suit
The other thing that causes shuffle to look less than random has to do with statistics and probability. Take the instance of a coin flip. While it's not very likely that one person flipping a coin 10 times would get heads every time, it's statistically – and even actually – possible (as illustrated in the opening to Tom Stoppard's "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead"). This is because each coin flip is a distinct event, with probabilities reset each time. The events only look related to humans observing it.
The the last element that causes us to suspect that iTunes Shuffle isn't truly random is our brains. The human brain is wired to seek out and see patterns – sometimes even where they don’t exist. This is an important function of the brain and makes our brains pretty powerful tools, but it can mislead us when examining questions like this.
FVAISEY wrote:Thanks for the responses. Trying to formulate strategy in Nuke Games regarding the cards. I guess the only safe way to safequard a stack from annihilation is to be holding the card. Unless my assumption that you can't deal out multiple cards for the same region at the same time is wrong also.