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Get support with the CQC › Forums › Appealing against a CQC inspection rating › Do “Hot Streaks” in Casino Games Actually Exist or Is It Just Randomness?
Hey everyone, I’ve been thinking about something that happened to me a couple of times recently and I can’t tell if it’s just coincidence or something my brain is overinterpreting. I’ll be playing normally, nothing special happening, then suddenly I hit a series of wins that feels like a “hot streak,” and it completely changes how I play afterward. Last week I was reading about different casino platforms and comparing how they work, and I ended up checking duckdice casino while browsing, which made me think more about whether these streaks are just randomness clustering or if players naturally start performing differently when they feel lucky. Do you personally believe in hot streaks, or is it just a mental pattern we create after the fact?
I’ve had this discussion with myself many times, and I honestly lean toward it being randomness that we interpret as a pattern. In my experience, wins often come in clusters simply because probability naturally works that way over time, not because anything “changes” in the game. I used to strongly believe I had lucky moments, but after tracking my sessions more carefully I realized I remembered the streaks much more than the boring in-between parts where nothing interesting happened. Now I try to treat every round as independent, even when things feel like they’re going my way. It helps me avoid increasing bets just because of a temporary feeling of momentum.
I’m just dropping into this thread while scrolling through the forum and found the discussion pretty interesting overall. Even though I don’t really play casino games myself, I can relate to the idea of people trying to find meaning in patterns, especially when outcomes happen close together in time. It’s a very human thing to connect events into a “story,” even when they might just be unrelated occurrences. I mostly read these kinds of threads because it’s interesting to see how different people interpret chance, luck, and decision-making in their own way.