Have you ever really tested this? 🙋🏼♂️It only works in math, not in real life.
2026-04-02 10:45:36
2
Wally Walker :
This also assumes a neutral game show host that doesn’t have producer screaming in their earpiece to sway you from your correct choice.
2026-05-08 01:08:23
0
Æther :
It seems like you couldn’t improve your odds by going into it 💯 that you will always switch. It just seems too mechanical where you would just be changing your 1/3 chance. For it to work, it seems like you would need to bring a coin to flip that determines if you switch. That seems like the only way to truly improve your odds to 50/50. Then you actually took a 50/50 chance by it remaining indeterminate.
2026-04-02 03:19:56
1
JakeF :
Years ago, some of the greatest minds around argued against this. They were proven wrong. Switch doors if you’re ever in this situation.
2026-06-01 12:05:16
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Lejuan :
It took me ages to understand this logic back in the day, but the key to understanding it is explained in this video: the game show host knows where the car is
2026-04-02 05:21:36
2
Droid :
That is the absolute best explanation of the Monty Hall problem ever.
2026-04-07 10:10:37
0
SilverScorp :
out by 1 third.
2026-04-23 00:51:00
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User12349274 :
This is such a common concept that comes up in tv shows and movies etc
2026-04-02 02:32:45
1
K M530 :
Imagine 100 doors and a car is behind one. You choose a door and the host opens up 98 of the remaining doors, knowing goats are behind each one. Would you switch to the 99th door or keep your original choice? (Switch; duh.)
2026-04-02 22:37:35
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shua shua :
This is a great explanation of the real method, not the mess that is usually given as explanation. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
2026-04-02 10:47:22
0
abcdghyd :
it remains fifty fifty..without intervention..why risk it
2026-05-24 11:41:13
0
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