General

Tablet's success rate

I'm really curious about the success rates...I know Nexon posted on their site that they do NOT have a fixed success rate, what is that suppose to mean? Does that mean that there is no pattern for the success rates of tablets? What if we were to do a hugeeee survey and figure this probability out?
Taken from GMS site: "Each time a tablet is used the success rate gradually decreases. No Tablets come with a fixed success rate. Scrolls do not work on Durability Items."
What's the meaning of "gradually decreases"? As in there's a pattern that they follow when they are used? Oh-My-God!
"No" tablets come with a fixed success rate, so their success rate randoms from tablets to tablets? I'm sure there's a range of success rate that Nexon refuses to publish, I think we should do some digging and find out the TRUE success rate on those tablets BEFORE we slap them on our precious items >.< I for myself have lost over 100m worth of durability items to tablets....I'm sure there are people out there that is about to lose enormous amount of mesos due to tablets, so why don't we step up and find out the success rate for ourselves?
P.S. Personally, I find it interesting that there is almost no fully scrolled durability items in the FM....

February 19, 2011

3 Comments • Newest first

wys00

[quote=drager260]I failed 3 of them in a row with no boom =/[/quote]

you got very lucky and unlucky...for 3 of them to fail and not boom, that's 0.6 ^ 3 which is 21.6% chance ;p

Reply February 19, 2011
drager260

I failed 3 of them in a row with no boom =/

Reply February 19, 2011
wys00

i know how u feel...i scroll them for fun too >.<
first slot (3/5) passed, one boomed and one didn't boom
USUALLY, I boom the earring on the 3rd slot...
I'm REALLY curious about it's success rate or how much it decreases by every time one tablet passes...
EDIT: @above: i definitely agree with u on that part, my hypothesis is that they start with a 90% rate, and seem to decrease by 20%ish for every time you pass one

Reply February 19, 2011 - edited