What is a gacha probability calculator?
A gacha probability calculator turns a posted drop rate into a clearer pull plan. If a banner says the target item has a 3% rate, that does not mean 10 pulls gives a 30% chance. Every pull can miss, so the real chance of at least one copy grows along a curve.
This tool is built for normal independent attempts: each pull has the same success rate, and one pull does not remove items from a pool. That matches many game banners, capsule-style random pulls, and digital draws without a shared stock count. It does not model pity systems, rate-up guarantees, spark counters, or limited stock prize pools.
The calculator is useful before spending because it makes the miss chance visible. A result like 26.26% can feel very different from seeing that the no-success chance is still 73.74%. Use it as an estimate, set a budget first, and avoid treating probability as a promise.
Formula explanation
P = 1 - (1 - r)^n In the formula, r is the single-pull success rate and n is the number of pulls. The term (1 - r)^n calculates the chance of missing every pull. Subtracting it from 1 gives the chance of getting at least one target item.
For a 3% drop rate and 10 pulls, the calculation is 1 - (0.97)^10, which is about 26.26%. This is why small rates need many attempts before the odds start to feel comfortable.
Example use cases
Ten pulls at 3%
A common rate-up style example: 3% per pull and 10 pulls gives about a 26.26% chance of at least one target item. The miss chance is still about 73.74%.
Saving for 50 pulls at 1%
At 1% per pull, 50 pulls gives about a 39.50% chance. That is better than a single pull, but still far from guaranteed.
Comparing 5% and 10%
At 20 pulls, a 5% rate gives about 64.15%, while a 10% rate gives about 87.84%. A small-looking rate change can matter a lot over repeated attempts.
Common reference table
| Scenario | Input | Result note |
|---|---|---|
| 1% drop rate | 100 pulls | About 63.40% for at least one success. |
| 3% drop rate | 10 pulls | About 26.26%, the default example. |
| 5% drop rate | 20 pulls | About 64.15% for at least one success. |
| 10% drop rate | 10 pulls | About 65.13% for at least one success. |
Responsible use
Probability can help you understand risk, but it cannot guarantee a win. If you are buying pulls, boxes, packs, or prize tickets, set a budget first and avoid spending more than you can afford. A calculator is a planning aid, not a reason to chase losses or ignore your limit.
FAQ
Does this calculator include pity or guaranteed pulls?
No. It assumes every pull has the same independent rate. If a game has pity, guarantees, or a spark system, the real odds can be different.
Why is 10 pulls at 3% not exactly 30%?
Because each pull can miss. The calculator finds the chance of missing all pulls first, then subtracts that from 100%.
Can I use this for banners with multiple target items?
Yes, if you know the combined rate for any target you would accept. Enter that combined success rate as the drop rate.
Does a high probability guarantee the item?
No. Probability describes risk across attempts, but any individual result can still miss. Set a budget before spending.
Related tools
At Least One Success
Calculate the chance of getting at least one success after multiple attempts, or find how many attempts you need.
Expected Cost
Estimate how much you may spend to reach a target probability in gacha pulls, blind boxes, or random packs.
Blind Box Calculator
Calculate the chance of getting your desired figure or secret item from blind boxes based on item count and boxes purchased.
Helpful guides
How Gacha Probability Works
Learn how gacha probability works, why repeated pulls do not add up directly, and how to read at least-one-success odds.
Blind Box Odds Explained
Understand blind box odds, equal variant assumptions, secret item limits, duplicate risk, and how to compare boxes with resale prices.