English

The generalized Alice HH vs Bob HT problem

Probability 2025-11-18 v1 Combinatorics

Abstract

In 2024, Daniel Litt posed a simple coinflip game pitting Alice's "Heads-Heads" vs Bob's "Heads-Tails": who is more likely to win if they score 1 point per occurrence of their substring in a sequence of n fair coinflips? This attracted over 1 million views on X and quickly spawned several articles explaining the counterintuitive solution. We study the generalized game, where the set of coin outcomes, {Heads, Tails}, is generalized to an arbitrary finite alphabet A, and where Alice's and Bob's substrings are any finite A-strings of the same length. We find that the winner of Litt's game can be determined by a single quantity which measures the amount of prefix/suffix self-overlaps in each string; whoever's string has more overlaps loses. For example, "Heads-Tails" beats "Heads-Heads" in the original problem because "Heads-Heads" has a prefix/suffix overlap of length 1 while "Heads-Tails" has none. The method of proof is to develop a precise Edgeworth expansion for discreteMarkov chains, and apply this to calculate Alice's and Bob's probability to win the game correct to order O(1/n).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2503.19035,
  title  = {The generalized Alice HH vs Bob HT problem},
  author = {Svante Janson and Mihai Nica and Simon Segert},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.19035},
  year   = {2025}
}

Comments

Comments welcome. 41 pages

R2 v1 2026-06-28T22:32:53.825Z