Probability that fools you
A rotting bridge. Two doors. A burning tower. Every step forces another two-choice gamble. A score attack where probability traps meet cinematic staging.
Wagering Wanderer — a maze of probability that betrays intuition.
Will you cross the rotting suspension bridge or fall into the chasm? Which of the two doors should you open? Out of three doors, should you really switch?
A new kind of score attack that fuses cinematic two-choice scenes with the very probability paradoxes mathematicians have wrestled with for centuries.
Key Features
Cinematic Stage Direction
Each stage has its own dedicated two-choice scene: suspension bridges, forked forest paths, locked doors, abandoned cabins, fairies in the deep woods, mossy chests guarded by a sage, legendary swords, the ancient Mouth of Truth. Moonlight, mossy stone, drifting fog, collapsing wood are all rendered with care. Every choice becomes a moment in a story, not just a probability.
Authentic Probability Paradoxes
The Monty Hall problem. The two-envelope problem. The St. Petersburg paradox. The gambler's fallacy. Counterintuitive probability events are baked into the stage mechanics. Just by playing, you will feel why "switching is better," "passing is better," or "accepting is better."
Session Stats and Achievements
Every session aggregates whether you are a "switcher" or a "stayer," whether you ride streaks or fight them. The more you play, the more your decision-making patterns become visible.
The Bayesian Sage Finale
After the boss, the sage reads your choices. Declare yourself from six factions and compare the declaration with your session stats to earn a bonus. Whether your self-image matches the data or not, every answer earns a bonus — knowing yourself and discovering yourself are both rewarded.
Global Leaderboard (new in v3.0, opt-in)
Compete on three axes — best score, best stage, and total runs — across four windows: all-time, today, this week, and this month. Leaderboard participation is optional: the first time you open the leaderboard you'll see a clear opt-in prompt, and your scores are never sent until you agree. You can opt in or out any time from Settings. Pick a player name on first launch, or let the "Auto-pick" button generate one like "Wanderer#1234". Optionally link your Apple ID to keep your ranking when you switch phones or reinstall. If you want to leave a linked account behind, the "Sign out" entry in Settings returns you to a fresh anonymous ID.
Simple Controls
Just tap. Play in short bursts or settle in for a long run.
Recommended For
People interested in probability or mathematical paradoxes
Fans of simple, score-focused games
Anyone curious about visualizing their decision-making patterns
A short, thoughtful break during commutes
About In-App Purchases
The full game is free to play. Two optional in-app purchases are available:
- "Remove Ads" ($1.99, one-time): Banner and interstitial ads are completely hidden. Rewarded videos remain available.
- "10 Tickets Pack" ($2.99, consumable): Lets your ticket balance exceed the soft cap of 10 up to a hard cap of 99.
Tickets can be earned for free at +3 per day and +1 per rewarded video (once daily). Payments are processed by Apple via StoreKit.
Coming Soon
Fixed-stage challenge mode (10, 25, 50 stages and more, with cleared-records tracking)
Extended Monty Hall (5 doors, a paid side mode)
Even more challenging probability paradoxes
Chrome-Stats does not own this Apple app. Please use these information below to contact the Apple app developer.