>>12530669possible but the likelihood decreases drastically the longer that our laws of physics appear to hold
suppose there was a guy who wrote down a random sequence of red and black 10,000, times, said that God gave it to him, then went down to the Monte Carlo casino and started basing his bets on the sequence he wrote down. In many worlds, there would be 2^10,000 possible outcomes, each with its own world, including one where he got it every single time and many people would probably start to believe him considering how improbable that result is
but there's less than a 1/1024 chance of him getting even the first ten in a row, less than 1 in a million for the first 20 in a row, so the worlds where the actual laws of probability hold are overwhelmingly larger than the worlds where this guy's 'divine revelation' appears to be true
the odds of our laws of physics being only true by coincidence is so small it's not even worth considering. the only reason we can even speak of such improbable things happening in many worlds is that EVERY possible world exists in a many worlds interpretation