Gambler's Fallacy Explained: Think You're Owed A Win?

The Gambler's Fallacy is when you think something is more likely to happen just because it didn’t happen before.

Imagine you're flipping a coin. You flip it 5 times, and it lands on heads every time. You might think, “It has to be tails next!” But that’s the Gambler's Fallacy, thinking the coin is “owed” a tails. In reality, each flip doesn’t care about what came before; it still has a 50% chance of being heads or tails.

Why It Happens

Sometimes people think things are “balanced out.” Like if you’ve had three red marbles in a row from a bag, you might believe the next one will be blue, even if there are more red marbles than blue ones. But that’s not how chance works. Each time is its own separate event.

Real Life Example

Think of it like taking turns at the playground swing. Just because your friend went high on their turn doesn’t mean you have to go low. You still get a good push, no matter what happened before.

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Examples

  1. A coin has landed on tails three times in a row. Someone thinks it's more likely to land on heads next.
  2. After losing five hands of poker, a player bets all their money on the sixth hand, thinking they're due for a win.
  3. Someone flips a coin and gets heads twice, they believe tails is now more likely.

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