This week the #puzzle is: Have You Heard the Buzz? #counting #frequency #combinations
| I recently introduced my children to a game called “Buzz” (also known as “Fizz buzz”), in which players take turns reciting whole numbers in order. However, in one particular variant of the game, anytime a number is a multiple of 7 or at least one of its digits is a 7, the player must say “buzz” instead of that number. |
| For example, here is how the first 20 turns of the game should proceed: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, buzz, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, buzz, 15, 16, buzz, 18, 19, 20. |
| How many times should “buzz” be said in the first 100 turns of the game (including those mentioned above in the first 20 turns)? |
And for extra credit:
| As we just saw, in the first 20 turns of the game, 15 percent of the numbers were “buzzed.” But as the game proceeds, an increasing frequency of numbers get buzzed. |
| There is a certain minimum number N such that, for the Nth turn in the game and for every turn thereafter, at least half the numbers up to that point have been buzzed. What is this value of N? |

Solution, possibly incorrect:
Method 1: I write a program to produce all the buzzes and count them. There are 30.
Method 2:
- We are looking at the numbers 1-100.
- If the last digit is 7, it’s a buzz: 7, 17, 27, … 97. 10 of these.
- If the next to last digit is 7, it’s a buzz: 70, 71, 72, … 79. 10 of these.
- If the number is a multiple of 7, it’s a buzz: 7, 14, 21, … 98. 14 of these.
- But if we just say 10 + 10 + 14, we’ve counted something twice. 77 will be counted 3 times!
- The first 10, we keep.
- The next 10, we throw 77 away, because we already had it. 10 + 9. (Among the 10 numbers beginning with the digit 7, exactly 1 also ends with a 7, and we already covered that.)
- The next 14, we throw 7, 70 and 77 away, because we already had them. 10 + 9 + 11. (Among the 14 numbers that are multiples of 7, exactly 3 are multiples that “keep” the 7. 1 * 7, 10 * 7, 11 * 7.)
- 10 + 9 + 11 = 30.
And for extra credit:
Method 1: I expand the program from above. I look for a frequency of about 0.5 and then zoom in to learn more about this general area. The result is illustrated in the Desmos. Look for the clump at 0.5 and zoom!

Method 2: The graph has a distinctive shape. Every time we run into a whole bunch of numbers, all beginning with 7, the frequency will grow. Afterwards it will go up and down a bit, until the next bunch, but on the whole it will keep growing. For our purposes, once we hit the 700000-799999 bunch, it grows past 0.5 and never dips below again.
I confirm this result via the program, looking at different thresholds. E.g. the 0.45 threshold is 71574. Look for the red stars in the Desmos file.
Anyway. N = 708588.
Method 3: A similar counting argument as above. Left as an exercise to the reader 😉















