If anyone can help me out here I would be grateful. I have completed a huge statistical analysis - something over 1.5 trillion simulations and am looking for the best way ... hell I'm looking for ANY way to present it at this point.
I took all 169 starting hands and ran one million simulations against nine players with nine random hands. Then I did the same with a nine handed table (eight opponents), then an eight handed table then... down to heads up.
One of the goals with this project was to show how hand value's change according to number of players. By changing - I mean that some hands have a positive equity heads up - but not 10-handed, while others have a positive equity 10-handed but not heads up. ie: A7 has a negative equity (9.93%) ten handed where it would need 10% equity to break even but has a positive equity (58.78) heads up (where 50% is break even for a random hand). There are also some hands which graph parabolic as one moves from 10-handed to heads up.
One of the difficulties is that one can't simply graph the thing because there would be 169 functions graphed on a single graph and that would be too messy to make heads or tails out of.
I need the equity line in there as well - for instance, 10-handed =10%, 8-handed 12.5% etc. I would like to use this as the x-axis. There is simply so much information that I'm not sure how to incorporate it into a nice neat package. Thoughts?
Thanks,
TUPStatistics: Posted by TheUnknownPlayer — Mon Mar 28, 2005 2:24 pm
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