Install
openclaw skills install @stanestane/game-design-perceived-randomness-auditAudit a game feature, combat system, loot table, reward loop, procedural system, chance mechanic, or uncertainty-driven design by how players are likely to perceive its randomness. Use when you need to evaluate whether a system will feel fair, streaky, rigged, sabotaging, manipulable, or skill-undermining; when players may misread independent events as patterned; or when randomness may sit too close to player action and create frustration. Analyze expectation gaps, gambler's-fallacy-style reactions, hidden pattern-seeking, input-versus-output randomness, perceived fairness, exploit risk, and ways to reshape presentation or mechanics.
openclaw skills install @stanestane/game-design-perceived-randomness-auditAudit not just the math of randomness, but the psychology of how players will read it.
Use this skill when the core question is not only "is this random system balanced?" but also "what story will players tell themselves about this randomness?" The goal is to catch places where independent events will be perceived as rigged patterns, where streaks will feel malicious, where uncertainty undermines competence, or where the game could use presentation or structure to make randomness feel fairer and more legible.
Read references/perception-patterns.md when you need the key psychology behind randomness perception.
Read references/audit-checklist.md when you need a compact checklist of design risks and mitigation levers.
Prioritize these questions:
If information is missing, infer cautiously and state the assumption.
Quickly identify:
Always organize the answer using this structure.
Raise these when relevant:
Only recommend what fits the design intent.
This skill is especially useful for:
This skill is less useful for:
Use this compressed flow when the user wants a quick answer:
Players do not experience randomness as raw probability tables. They experience it as felt fairness, perceived intent, streak memory, and the degree to which their choices still seem to matter.