Interesting calculations. Good to see someone else take an interest in that aspect of the game

Oh, and don't get too discouraged if you aren't high on the boards yet: It's amazing how much people speed up when they've played for a while.
Hmm, I feel like figuring out some of this type of stuff myself:
A Corner beginner board like the fake board screenshot that was posted here (along with a fake 0s time) is 4 possibilities so 68 days of constant playing by ians working. However, any board with a 3x3 gap, gives 16 possibilities, so 17 days. It might be interesting to find out what % of boards exist that can be solved with a single click.
The current tournament (5x5, 9 mines), each board has a probability of 25c9 = 8,171,900. The chance, though, of a baord where the mines fill a single row plus a single column, since there are 25 boards which fit that pattern, is 326876, which at 2 boards a second, you have a 50% chance of finding in the first 23 hours. Okay, thats still a bit too much to brute force, but for anyone wondering how some people got the times they did in season 10, touney 5 (5x4, 4 mines), there are only 4845 possible boards, so a vertical row board, at 2 games a second, should have appeared every 8 minues on average.
On the other hand, there are 1,977,204,582,144,932,989,443,770,175 different intermediate boards, of which only 29,033,531,588,150,684,937,045 have a blank top row, so roughly 580 hexillion have a blank row or column, thats 1/3333 or so? I may have that wrong...
To get an example "perfect int board", of the type where either the bottom, top, left, or right 6 rows are all full, and 4 remaining mines placed randomly elsewhere, at 10 seconds a game average, should have a 50% chance to occur every 856 billion years of constant playing. So if anyone gets a board like that, you'd better not waste it!