
Need to pick a winner for a raffle? This program has your back! Put the names of the entrants then watch to see who will survive a series of destructive attacks!
Please use RNGenocide 2 instead of this one. It's much easier to use, homie.
Gaming Deets
RNGenocide is a program used for Chair's giveaways on her Twitch streams. The user will first input how many people are there and what their names are. These people are then turned into skeletons in the program and put into a survival trial. Last person to survive wins.
Features
• Add as many skeletons as you want!
• Three levels of mayhem!
• Spooky!
Development History
Reno Smash Community was doing raffle prizes for their tournaments. Chair decided to create a fun program for it.
Programming
Trivia
• This program was intended to have over 5 rounds of survival but upon seeing that most skeletons die during round 2, it was cut short to having only three rounds.
• The scrapped round 5 consisted of having two skeletons turn into Street Fighter characters and fight in a 1v1 battle. This battle would have worked in a way where each fighter rolls a dice to determine the power of their attack. Whoever's health gets depleted first loses.
• It was planned to have Chair's bot, A.Y.A., to be some sort of a narrator throughout the game. She was also planned to be voiced. Due to time constraints of having program completed before a giveaway in an anime convention, this concept along with others was scrapped.
• This is Chair's first program made in high resolution.

"When we do our raffle draws at our competitive fighting game scene, something about wasn't really hype. So I decided to do something that no local fighting game scene may have not done, a custom giveaway program. This actually caused some hype screaming in our giveaways, and it made me really happy. Inputting names isn't really user friendly, which is why I kinda make this exclusive to my local scene so I can be the one setting it up. Some people outside our region saw this program actually liked this and I was super hype about it. I mean I did this for fun, but I felt like I programmed something useful for once." - ChairGTables, 2016
Chill!
