Prior to this Sunday's Super Bowl LII game between the Eagles and Patriots, EA released their official prediction of the game based on an Mut 25 coins vs. CPU simulation. The Patriots being crowned champions with a 24 20 score. But how could a single simulation forecast all the possible possibilities a football game like this can be played out? Like with everything else we can know more about this particular match up by taking a larger sample size.

What would happen if they played this identical Super Bowl 10 times? Which team would win more often and what would it tell us about which team is without doubt the better team? With these questions in mind, and in the interest of participating in the well known tradition of analyzing and analyzing the Super Bowl up to the level where it has lost its meaning, we took just one steps (or one step) more than EA and then simulated Super Bowl LII 10 times.

So, it's not like finding any clear answers to who's more likely be victorious in the final game. The simulations show that if you played the match 10 times over, the same team will be victorious in five games. One could possibly consider the Eagles having a slight advantage in the total number of points scored during those contests (Eagles 293. Patriots 280) as an indication that their Eagles being Super Bowl champs, but you'd have to be a committed Eagles fan to make such a claim. However, the most important thing to remember is that it's anybody's game this year.

If the results suggest anyone being as a winner during Super Bowl 52. it's evidently the fans. With an average win margin of only 7.3 points in these simulations, the evidence suggests that it will likely to be one score contest that Mut coins for sale will come down to the final drive to determine who is the winner. Only three games of the 10 that the winners had a greater score, so fans will be relieved to be aware that blowouts are not likely to happen here in the eyes of Madden.