![]() Last edited on 2 23:15:46 by Shuttleduckīut there’s still a significant question. More crackers were then cracked on classic over time allowing a partyhat market relatively uninfluenced by the duplication to develop. This means that, more than likely, the majority of players transferred their partyhats from classic to RS2. Interestingly enough, the price tier on RuneScape classic follows the rarity tier we discovered from popping the crackers. Personally, I believe purple became the most common, if it is, as a result of Jagex haphazardly removing masses of partyhats from the game after the dupe. Unfortunately, I have no way of sharing it on these forums.) Even if they had focused on purples, they're just so rare that chances are the AutoRune crew didn't dupe enough to make them the most common. There is also another source out there which can no longer be obtained. (Search around in random places for “Cracker Party by ARC” for a primary source documenting the dupe. But, based on Kaitniek's documenting of the event, it seems like crackers were the main focus rather than partyhats. Interesting results considering the current price tier on RuneScape live. This led us to believe that the following are more than likely the EXACT probabilities: Partyhat rarities are based on a linear function. It's linear! (With the exception of green) Remove the green data point and you can fit a line with an r^2 value of. Plugging this data into Excel revealed a very interesting result. Last edited on 2 23:15:07 by Shuttleduckīy combining the 1,337 pulls with a few hundred more pulls from the other contributors, we obtained the following data: There is also a summarized version of the video posted by a well known rs video maker. ![]() (You should be able to find it easily.) There is an original video by me of the original footage. Video recording of the popping procedure can be found on YouTube. Analyze data in Microsoft excel and report conclusions. Collect data and combine with trusted data from others that chose to help.ĥ. Purchase christmas crackers on RuneScape live.Ĥ. (It is quite possible we have obtained the exact probabilities.) Secondary item probabilities are not statistically significant and have a high margin of error with low confidence, however they still yield interesting results that suggest the assumed-accurate documented history on popular fansites concerning Christmas Crackers is completely inaccurate and/or fabricated.ġ. The results for the partyhat probabilities are statistically significant with low margin of error and high confidence. The process was recorded and released for public viewing. The project was conducted with as strict of adherence to the scientific method as possible on RuneScape. The project was an attempt to discover the exact probabilities of obtaining each color partyhat from a Christmas cracker. This is the final writeup of the “Xmas Cracker Research Project!” (QFC: 17-18-35-63828458) that I designed and led from late June 2012 into early July 2012.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |