Because a practical test shows clearly otherwise, the result 'settles' to 1/2 or rather the average of the samples.In order for N tosses of a fair coin to have a mean of exactly 0.5, you must have N/2 heads. This rules out any sequence with an odd number of tosses. In the case of an even number of tosses, the probability of getting exactly N/2 heads is
nCr(N, N/2) / 2^N
As 2^N grows faster than nCr(N, N/2), the probability of any particular sequence having exactly N/2 heads diminishes as the length of the sequence grows. Indeed, the probability approaches zero as N → ∞.
Recall that you were talking about a practical test for determining whether a given (finite) sequence is random. I've given you "my theory" as to why it is a terrible test for randomness; if you disagree, please explain how my analysis fails.
To say that settling to the average is antithetical means we must not be talking about the same things or else you have NEVER EVER NEVER EVER done a REAL LIFE practical test to prove or disprove your theoretical 'result'.
DO A GOD DANG TEST WILL YA ?? ha ha