PhoebeHalliwel wrote: »Even if all of this is true and drop rates are rigged etc, i believe that most of people would still keep trying them if they are trully interested in the box's content..(be it by buying boxes themselves or from other players)
not much to say about that but ->
@Deprived Do we have actual evidence of drop rates being different from what they announced right now? In the past maybe it's been so, you think they'd still keep lying about it after being sued?
..Anyway 1 2 3 4% is always a very low chance.. As far as i know the max drop rate of valuable items from older boxes was (at least in theory?) 5%..
screw dropping :< that's for the lucky ones.
i'd love to see the amount of coupon required to unlock sets or whatsoever reduced to.. 300 coupons at least!
RobertLivia wrote: »Wow, not even going to argue anymore. xD
The other problem is that while opening boxes you also get the "4 other things" which you can get and it's beyond obvious that they're fabricated. The chances are highly unlikely that I get a potion/megaphone or whatever and that the other possible outcomes were 3 sets + a rune 3x in a row. It just gives you that false hope of "OH IF I CLICKED HERE I'D GET IT. DAMN SO CLOSE."
RobertLivia wrote: »Careful not to hurt yourself to badly.
Can't be going around calling people stupid when you used the wrong "too".
DragonRider wrote: »Hey all,
Just thought I would post this video here as it relates to gambling probabilities, and how the owners of such machines (aka "the house") decide what the jackpot win rates are in order for them to turn a significant profit.
The guy in the video actually invents a machine, inside his backpack (to hide from the security), to hack the gambling machine in attempts to gain a higher rate of jackpot outcomes. Does he succeed with it? Watch the video to find out!
Video is 7-8 minutes long and is worth a look, but if you really want to see something important, go to 5:10 mark in the video.
There's a reason why f2p games employ these gambling mechanics, they have hired top psychologists long ago to know that the human mind can easily be snared into spending lots more $$$ with this business tactic. The question is, will it work on you?
[video]
DragonRider wrote:There's a reason why f2p games employ these gambling mechanics, they have hired top psychologists long ago to know that the human mind can easily be snared into spending lots more $$$ with this business tactic. The question is, will it work on you?