A randomization system that selects each element one by one, not re-selecting an element until they've all been selected, wherein this process is restarted. Hence the name, it can be thought of as pulling each element out of a bag at random until the bag is empty, then refilling or replacing the bag with an identical one and repeating the process.
A randomization process named n-bag randomization has n elements (for example, 5-bag randomization has 5 elements, 8-bag has 8 elements, and 14-bag has 14 elements).
A randomization process named n-bag randomization has n elements (for example, 5-bag randomization has 5 elements, 8-bag has 8 elements, and 14-bag has 14 elements).
Tetris is a famous example of bag randomization. It provides each Tetrimino (piece) once every 7 times.
by The_Epicness9000 March 28, 2024
Get the Bag Randomization mug.The most stupidest idiot in the world, and with his short name "Random" he will be summoned so be careful with your mouth
"R: wait what the fuck am i here"
"R: wait what the fuck am i here"
by Randomati0n July 13, 2022
Get the Randomation mug.Cannot begin to keep up with you
by Totally Random July 1, 2022
Get the Totally random mug.by Totally Random July 1, 2022
Get the Totally Random mug.Once apon a time Luke could never be held accountable for his actions or verbal gibber as he was born with a rare gift courtesy of his genetic makeup. He could fool the whiliest and most cunning trickery, hibernating ways and strange connection with nature! He even got called a dog whisperer even… True story! But what made him truly unique was simply, where is Luke? shit it’s been 3yrs and Luke’s and the front door for example and I’m still lying in bed in my oodie lol.
True fact from Luke himself, don’t take him on his word rule number 1, if he says there is a crocodile in a near by lagoon don’t rule it out and thirdly if you are ever in a bother and need a quick solution (legal of course) try and locate Luke hahaha yeah your in shit…Luke spends a lot of time outside the box so running around in the bush at night isn’t uncommon 🥵 But people Australia is rather large and he does get about (not around!) so it’s best he contact you. Also and this is a big one… he is like a fox(the animal) and his mind constantly changes uh huh try keeping up with a fox people 🐕 only a 12guage beats a fox!!!
True fact from Luke himself, don’t take him on his word rule number 1, if he says there is a crocodile in a near by lagoon don’t rule it out and thirdly if you are ever in a bother and need a quick solution (legal of course) try and locate Luke hahaha yeah your in shit…Luke spends a lot of time outside the box so running around in the bush at night isn’t uncommon 🥵 But people Australia is rather large and he does get about (not around!) so it’s best he contact you. Also and this is a big one… he is like a fox(the animal) and his mind constantly changes uh huh try keeping up with a fox people 🐕 only a 12guage beats a fox!!!
Luke is at the door mum. Totally Random mind you! Luke had 20mins to kill so yep random stop in. Oh nice oddie ha ha yes I’ll have a tea thanks 👍
by Totally Random July 1, 2022
Get the totally random mug.The theory, from Taleb's book of the same name, that humans systematically misinterpret random events, seeing patterns where none exist and attributing skill to luck. Fooled by Randomness Theory argues that we are narrative creatures, wired to find stories in noise, to see causes where there are only correlations, to believe we understand what is actually random. Successful traders are often just lucky, not skilled; failed entrepreneurs are often just unlucky, not incompetent. The theory explains why we overestimate our ability to predict, why we trust experts who are actually random, why we build theories on statistical flukes. It's the foundation of skepticism about success stories, about "genius" CEOs, about anyone whose track record could be explained by chance. The theory doesn't deny skill; it insists on distinguishing skill from luck—and shows how bad we are at that distinction.
Example: "The hedge fund manager had ten years of brilliant returns. Fooled by Randomness Theory asked: could this happen by chance? The math said yes—a few funds will always be lucky by pure randomness. The manager was celebrated as a genius until the next ten years revealed the truth: he'd been lucky, not skilled. His investors had been fooled by randomness."
by Dumu The Void March 7, 2026
Get the Fooled by Randomness Theory mug.A framework proposing that we are not only fooled by randomness (seeing patterns where none exist) but also by the illusion that randomness explains everything—that we systematically attribute to chance what is actually structured, caused, or designed. Illusion by Randomness Theory reveals the opposite bias: seeing randomness where there is pattern, dismissing genuine signals as noise, attributing to luck what is actually skill, structure, or causality. It's the bias of the hyper-skeptic, the debunker, the person who explains away every anomaly as coincidence. While Taleb warned against seeing patterns in noise, Illusion by Randomness warns against seeing noise in patterns—a complementary blindness that is equally dangerous.
Illusion by Randomness Theory "He won the lottery twice. 'Just randomness,' they said. But the lottery wasn't random—it was rigged. Illusion by Randomness: seeing chance where there's corruption, dismissing pattern as noise. The bias protects us from seeing structure we'd rather not acknowledge. Not everything random is random; sometimes the pattern is real, and we just don't want to see it."
by Dumu The Void March 8, 2026
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