Kalkulator Streak - Streak Menang/Kalah

Kalkulator streak gratis. Hitung probabilitas streak menang dan kalah. Gunakan untuk perencanaan strategi taruhan.

Masukkan probabilitas antara 0,1 % dan 99,9 %
Hasil
P(seri menang panjang N) --
P(seri kalah panjang N) --
Seri terpanjang yang diharapkan --
P(≥ 1 seri tersebut dalam N taruhan) --

Cara menggunakan kalkulator ini

  1. Masukkan probabilitas kemenangan taruhan tunggal Anda sebagai persentase (mis. 55)
  2. Masukkan panjang streak yang ingin Anda evaluasi
  3. Masukkan jumlah taruhan total
  4. Lihat probabilitas streak dan rangkaian terpanjang yang diharapkan

Rumus

P(streak N kemenangan) = p ^ N

P(streak N kekalahan) = (1 − p) ^ N

Rangkaian Terpanjang yang Diharapkan (perkiraan) = log(N · (1 − p)) / log(1 / p)

P(≥ 1 streak kemenangan panjang N dalam M taruhan) ≈ 1 − (1 − p^N)^(M − N + 1)

Pertanyaan yang sering diajukan

Why does my expected longest streak look so long?

Variance grows logarithmically with sample size. With 1000 coin flips you’ll typically see a streak of 9-10 heads. Long streaks feel surprising but are mathematically expected — most bettors mistake them for hot/cold periods rather than ordinary variance.

How does streak length affect bankroll management?

Even a 60% win rate produces 5+ losing streaks regularly. Bankroll management (Kelly fractions, flat staking) must absorb these without ruin. Use this calculator with a streak length of 5-7 to see how often you’ll see those losing runs and size your unit accordingly.

Are sports streaks predictive?

Mostly no. Independent events (coin-flip-like markets) produce streaks purely by chance. There can be small predictive effects (injury cascades, team morale) but they’re usually overstated. Treat past streaks as variance unless you have concrete model-based reasons to believe otherwise.

What's the math behind 'expected longest run'?

For independent Bernoulli trials with success probability p over N trials, the expected longest run of successes converges to log(N(1−p))/log(1/p). It’s a logarithmic approximation that’s accurate for large N and gives the typical longest streak you’d observe.