00:00This is a deadly game. Anyone who loses will be crushed into pulp by an iron ball.
00:04The rules sound simple enough. Guess the number on the dice correctly, and you clear the stage.
00:09But something strange happened. The host rolled the dice three times in a row,
00:12and every single time it landed on one. Could the dice have been tampered with?
00:16On the fourth roll, the host covered the dice with a lid so no one could see the result.
00:20Players now had to rely on their own judgment and step into the cage that matched the number
00:24they believed was facing up. The correct guess meant splitting billions in prize money,
00:28but a wrong choice meant instant death. The timer was set for 30 minutes.
00:32So what would the dice show this time? From a probability standpoint, after landing on one
00:36three times, the odds of it landing on one again should be very low. That meant two and six looked
00:41like the smarter bets. But an older man in the group disagreed. He argued that the dice must have
00:46been rigged, with its center of gravity shifted to force a certain outcome. If that was the case,
00:51then this round wasn't really about probability or intuition at all. It was about realizing the
00:55dice itself was faulty. Still he only talked big and never actually made a move. Just as the crowd
01:00hesitated, a high school student suddenly stepped forward and walked straight into cage number one
01:05without a second thought. Seeing this, others rushed to follow, quickly filling it up. Jack the main
01:10character couldn't shake the feeling that he was missing something crucial. There had to be a sure win
01:14strategy hidden in the rules. Watching more and more people cram into cage number one, Jack's nervous
01:19sidekick panicked. If they didn't grab a spot soon, it'd be too late. But instead of following the crowd,
01:24Jack.
01:24We come.