There are $N$ contestants about to play Mingle, where $N$ is less than $500$. This time, in each round, the number for group size can be anywhere from $1$ to $10$, with each number equally likely to be called. Also, the numbers called in the rounds are all independent of each other. It appears this version of Mingle will continue until there are no more survivors.
Before the game starts, one of the contestants, Young-il, does some quick computation. He says to his companion, Gi-hun: “Oh no, it’s too bad we only have $N$ people.” (Of course, Young-il doesn’t actually say “$N$,” but rather the number that $N$ represents.)
Young-il continues: “If we had started with $N+1$ people instead, I’d expect the game to last about $10$ additional rounds, on average, than I’d expect from starting with $N$ people.”
What is the value of $N$?
In the extra-credit version of Mingle, we again assume that the contestants are all genial, cooperative mathematicians, and there will me no nefarious and/or inadvertent issues with people not being able to form the appropriate groups. In this version, it is even easier to believe this, since rather than unceremonious death, let's say that all contestants in Extra Credit Mingle get paid proportionally for the number of rounds lasted, so that everyone is incentivized for someone to last to the next round.
The extra credit wrinkle of only ever needing to make groups of size $1$ to $10$ introduces some very weird behavior. For instance, if we ever had $N = 2520 = \textsf{lcm} \{ 1, 2, \dots, 10 \}$ then the game will go on for an infinite number of rounds, since no matter what number is called, the contestants will be able to make appropriately round groups. Thus, while there is a nonzero expectation for the number of rounds in the Extra Credit Mingle for $N \lt 2520,$ for any $N \geq 2520$ the expected number of rounds is infinite.
Anyway, let's set up the conditional expectation chain. Let's say that for some $N,$ we know that $E_N$ is the expected number of rounds when starting with $N$ contestants. From the law of total probability, assuming that we know $E_k$ for all $k = 1, \dots, N,$ we can set up the following recursive formula: $$E_N = 1 + \sum_{i=1}^{10} \mathbb{P} \{ i \} E_{ i \lfloor N / i \rfloor } = 1 + \frac{1}{10} \sum_{i=1}^{10} E_{i \lfloor N / i \rfloor}, \,\, \text{for $N \lt 2520$}.$$ (Note, and last one, sorry, but I just think it's kinda neat ... that we see here in the case of $N=2520$ that since $i\lfloor N / i\rfloor = N$ for each $i = 1, \dots, 10,$ that we get the nonsensical $E_{2520} = 1 + E_{2520}.$)
Now there are a few ways to think about this. We can turn the recursion formula into a giant system of linear equations and then solve the $500 \times 500$ lower $10$-diagonal matrix inverse to solve the values of $E_N,$ $N = 1, \dots, 500.$ Instead, I opted for setting up a memoized recursive function in a few lines of Python:
from math import floor exp_num_rounds = {} def compute_exp_num_rounds(N): if N == 0: return 0 if N not in exp_num_rounds.keys(): transitions = [] for i in range(10): transitions.append( int((i+1) * floor( N / ( i+ 1.0) )) ) others = sum([ compute_exp_num_rounds(t) for t in transitions if t < N ]) self = sum([ 1 for t in transitions if t == N]) exp_num = (1.0 + 0.1 * others)/(1.0 - 0.1 * self) exp_num_rounds[N] = exp_num return exp_num_rounds[N]
Using this function I quickly calculated $E_N$ for $N = 1, \dots, 500,$ and in fact for all $N$ up to $2519.$ We find what looks from a distance as a relatively straight line with a few barely discernable jumps. If we plot the differences $E_{N+1} - E_N$ versus $N$ we see that there are only $9$ total values of the $N$ in $\{1, \dots, 2519\}$ such that the number of expected rounds would be more than $9$ more if they started with $N+1.$ Conveniently, enough, since there is only one such value of below $500$, we know that Young-il is upset that they are starting the round of Extra Credit Mingle with $N=359$ contestants.
Looking at the values with large jump sizes, we can start to build a theoretical argument for why these values exhibit this behavior. Note that in each of these cases, $$N \in \{ 359, 719, 839, 1079, 1259, 1439, 1679, 1799, 2159\}$$ that we have $i \not\mid N$ for each $i = 2, 3, \dots, 10$ while there is only one value of $j \in \{ 2, 3, \dots, 10 \}$ for which $j \not\mid N+1.$ In a sufficiently handwavy way, this relative $9:1$ ratio in probability of dropping below $N$ after round one, is what is driving the roughly $9$ to $10$ additional expected rounds.