MT- M/S/G results 26

Each number picked is an independent event. Like an individual roll of a dice.

Which is another drawing fallacy that if you have 10% odds you should draw a tag once every 10 years.

Not how that works either.

The only other drawing stat that matters to me is your odds are zero 100% of the time if you don't apply.
Yeah, that's totally true about the 10% meaning once every ten years. Each year is independent, so you have a 10% chance every year.

I don't quite agree with your assessment about each number picked is an individual event. In that example I gave, the 625 points/apps are placed in a list with the other 64,613 and given a random number. You need 1 of your 625 apps to be in the top 12. I know GoHunt and AI both says you have an 11% chance of that happening and you say you have a .96% chance of that happening. No idea lol
 
Yeah, that's totally true about the 10% meaning once every ten years. Each year is independent, so you have a 10% chance every year.

I don't quite agree with your assessment about each number picked is an individual event. In that example I gave, the 625 points/apps are placed in a list with the other 64,613 and given a random number. You need 1 of your 625 apps to be in the top 12. I know GoHunt and AI both says you have an 11% chance of that happening and you say you have a .96% chance of that happening. No idea lol
Thats why people are disappointed with the published draw odds by the various services like gohunt and the MTFWP "detailed" reports.

There is no way to predict draw odds with a squared points system, better off rolling chicken bones.
 
The specifics of how they draw the tags are the most important. Say there is a unit with 30 tags. The same unit has 300,000 total squared bonus points of applicants.

My guess of how they complete the draw is they assign each individual entry (total squared bonus pts) a randomly generated number. The lowest 30 of those 300,000 randomly generated numbers draws a tag. So, each entry has a 30/300,000 chance of a tag (.01%). So, a person has 10 pts. Since each random number is independent (ie RANDOM) you could calculate the chances of being one of the 30 lowest random numbers this way, 1-(.9999)^100 = .0099506% x 100 (10 pts) = .995066% chance. You could just say 100 x (30/300,000) = 1%, close enough. The NR 10% issue (and a single individual having multiple numbers within the top 30), complicates slightly, but from a practical perspective the above will get you close enough. This is pretty easy to figure out for each individual district once you calculate the total entries (squared bonus pts) in play. ****Obviously, you can only look at past draw odds and figure this out, but, the past is the best predictor of the future, so there's that.****

They could operate the draw differently (each tag is drawn independently of one another) but I think that is unlikely because the above is really simple for them to run (and probably more importantly pretty difficult to screw up).

Flame away.
 
The specifics of how they draw the tags are the most important. Say there is a unit with 30 tags. The same unit has 300,000 total squared bonus points of applicants.

My guess of how they complete the draw is they assign each individual entry (total squared bonus pts) a randomly generated number. The lowest 30 of those 300,000 randomly generated numbers draws a tag. So, each entry has a 30/300,000 chance of a tag (.01%). So, a person has 10 pts. Since each random number is independent (ie RANDOM) you could calculate the chances of being one of the 30 lowest random numbers this way, 1-(.9999)^100 - (.0001)^100 = .0099506% x 100 (10 pts) = .995066% chance. You could just say 100 x (30/300,000) = 1%, close enough. The NR 10% issue (and a single individual having multiple numbers within the top 30), complicates slightly, but from a practical perspective the above will get you close enough. This is pretty easy to figure out for each individual district once you calculate the total entries (squared bonus pts) in play.

They could operate the draw differently (each tag is drawn independently of one another) but I think that is unlikely because the above is really simple for them to run (and probably more importantly pretty difficult to screw up).

Flame away.
How many seagulls do I have to put in your house before you think someone is doing it intentionally?
 
The specifics of how they draw the tags are the most important. Say there is a unit with 30 tags. The same unit has 300,000 total squared bonus points of applicants.

My guess of how they complete the draw is they assign each individual entry (total squared bonus pts) a randomly generated number. The lowest 30 of those 300,000 randomly generated numbers draws a tag. So, each entry has a 30/300,000 chance of a tag (.01%). So, a person has 10 pts. Since each random number is independent (ie RANDOM) you could calculate the chances of being one of the 30 lowest random numbers this way, 1-(.9999)^100 = .0099506% x 100 (10 pts) = .995066% chance. You could just say 100 x (30/300,000) = 1%, close enough. The NR 10% issue (and a single individual having multiple numbers within the top 30), complicates slightly, but from a practical perspective the above will get you close enough. This is pretty easy to figure out for each individual district once you calculate the total entries (squared bonus pts) in play. ****Obviously, you can only look at past draw odds and figure this out, but, the past is the best predictor of the future, so there's that.****

They could operate the draw differently (each tag is drawn independently of one another) but I think that is unlikely because the above is really simple for them to run (and probably more importantly pretty difficult to screw up).

Flame away.

Correct, you would have to know how they run the draw.
 
Ok, I see what you're doing there. So if that's true, a lot of hunts would be better for even the top point holders if there was no point system. lol

Actual Moose hunt in MT: 12 permits
Applicants: 978
12/978 = 1.2% draw odds (no points)

25 point holder - 626 squared points (chances)
Total squared points from all applicants - 65,238
626/65,238 = .96%
Doesn’t you second example only have a single draw/ 1 permit vs the first example had 12?
 

Forum statistics

Threads
119,046
Messages
2,214,920
Members
38,737
Latest member
Gavinlane18
Back
Top