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First, define "proper" distribution. Random numbers are, well, random - the results you're seeing are entirely consistent with (pseudo) randomness.

Expanding on this, I assume what you want is some feeling of "fairness", so the user can't go 100 turns without a success. If so, I'd keep track of the number of failures since the last success, and weight the generated result. Let's assume you want 1 in 5 rolls to "succeed". So you randomly generate a number from 1 to 5, and if it's 5, great.

If not, record the failure, and next time, generate a number from 1 to 5, but add on say, floor(numFailures / 2). So this time, again, they have a 1 in 5 chance. If they fail, next time the winning interval is 4 and 5; a 2 in 5 chance of success. With these choices, after 8 failures, they are certain to succeed.

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First, define "proper" distribution. Random numbers are, well, random - the results you're seeing are entirely consistent with (pseudo) randomness.