warikk Posted Saturday at 09:50 PM #1 Posted Saturday at 09:50 PM Let’s break down the actual logic behind the Provably Fair system. The outcome of your next roll is determined by a cryptographic hash combination of the Server Seed, your Client Seed, and the Nonce (the bet counter). When players hit a bad streak and instantly rotate their client seed to "change their luck," they are logically doing nothing more than shuffling a deck of cards that was already randomized. Because the server seed remains hidden and the nonces are sequential, changing your custom input doesn't alter the mathematical distribution of the underlying random number generator. Even knowing the pure physics of the cryptography, do you still find yourself resetting your seed just to clear the mental slate, or do you strictly trust the math to balance out over time? Let's debate the logic.
woonori Posted yesterday at 03:35 AM #2 Posted yesterday at 03:35 AM i still do it sometimes not because i think it changes the math but just to break the routine and feel like im in control of something even if i know its placebo
Pyxique4 Posted yesterday at 09:21 AM #3 Posted yesterday at 09:21 AM I swapped my seed after 14 reds on dice last month and hit a green on the very next click, still feels good even though I know it means nothing.
kimojgv70 Posted 4 hours ago #4 Posted 4 hours ago I get the math, but calling it pointless misses the pssychological side. If you're on a tilt, hitting that reset can stop you from chasing losses for a minute, and that alone has value.
mika36gkag3r Posted 4 hours ago #5 Posted 4 hours ago same logic yet the hash chains a different result how pointless
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