zip, 428.21 KB
zip, 428.21 KB

Do Some Bingo Cards Win More than Other Cards? - An Experiment

There are theories that predict more winable bingo cards;
namely Tippett and Grandville Theories. These seem like plausible theories made by respected mathematicians. This is an experiment to see if some cards win more often than other cards.

I play bingo in a club. There are twenty to fifty players.

I noticed that you must win in at least twenty five turns. I wrote a computer
program to make bingo cards and play with them; this is easy for a computer
which is very mathematical. I was able to play 1000 games a second with my
home computer. I count the wins in less than 26 as a measure of quality.

I play 1000 cards 1000 times each. I compare these cards to a master list with high scoring cards. I replace lower scoring cards with higher scoring cards.

In this way, I get the highest scoring cards concentrated on a master list.
Regular cards win about 80 times in 1000 tries. The master list boosted wins to 108 wins per 1000 games.

I use a number seed to make cards so I can make a card again. What I did to see if cards

win more was to use the master list cards to play again and see there winability then.

I played 530 million games to make a master list of 1000 top winning cards. However;

when I played with these top cards again, they proved to be no better than a randomly made card.

This seems to indicate that all bingo cards have an equal chance of winning and no card

is any better than any other card.

In this product I include: the program, the master top scoring card list, the top scoring
list when used again, more details about the program.

If cards did show more winability, I would have pursued a reason for this - different last digits, average near the mean as the bingo theories indicate they should be like.

My explanation to this project is this: A card may score very high by chance. That is, a
card may win more times in 1000 trials by chance. Every 1000 cards, a few may excel by chance.
It is like winning a lottery.

If you win a lottery, than does not mean you are more likely to win another lottery again.

You have an equal chance to win another lottery as anyone else.

I am sure this is not the final word on this matter and some other thing may come up, but

this is solid evidence against bingo theories.

Paul Skittone 2023
Creative Commons "Sharealike"

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