Quote Originally Posted by Squa11_Leonhart View Post
A computer is not capable of true RNG Lexiii, it is Pseudo RNG.
I am a computer engineer. I am more than aware of how PRNG works. The reason your assumption is wrong is that in order to analyze a PRNG for flaws, you need access to every roll. You don't know how many times the server has rolled, when it will roll next, what the results of any of those rolls are, etc. Because of this, it's as good as true RNG, assuming it has equal distribution over time. It's also likely that they are using Mersenne Twister, which as to my knowledge has no major flaws unless you use a low entropy seed.

Also, computers *can* have true RNG, they just need an external source of entropy. The 'safest' sources of entropy are things like radioactive decay or CBR. All Linux machines (which SE's servers likely are) use various things like disk I/O as a source of tamper-proof unpredictable entropy.