But who took the first roll was already chosen randomly. My argument is that who gets to the first square where they can buy something doesn’t become any more random by going more laps. The probability of any given player getting to the first purchasable square is 100% determined by the random process that decides who gets to go first in the “warmup round”.
But who took the first roll was already chosen randomly. My argument is that who gets to the first square where they can buy something doesn’t become any more random by going more laps. The probability of any given player getting to the first purchasable square is 100% determined by the random process that decides who gets to go first in the “warmup round”.