Simply making dice to throw around is... silly in a way. Whoever thought physics was the best determinant of random outcomes was a fool. Nor was the person who thought you could program randomness. Nope, if you wanted true randomness you used magic obviously. Thus the owner of the small business "Magic Dice" started well his small business "Magic Dice". It failed initially because he just had plastic white dice with black dots that would give you a completely random outcome. Most mortals didn't understand and just bought bulk regular dice that "Worked fine". The ingrates didn't understand how much power went into making a single enchantment of pure randomness within a subset. So then he made special dice that glittered, sparkled, and did special effects when you tossed them. Those sold really well which earned him some good money till he started experimenting with some magic dice that had more special effects. Those special effects were so special they could distort reality and his clientele learned how truly magic the die crafter was. However these special dice were so special that it took time for him to work on them. He'd automated most of the dice creation with some magic, and usually took some time to run the store or design new dice... but his passion was now to challenge himself with the new special dice... but the question was who deserved the dice? Probably not to the highest bidder and... Why not ask the "Every person on Earth" Die?
The Die was simply a white plastic D6 without any symbols, once you got to big enough numbers the dice started to look like spheres and lost a lot of usage without an electron microscope, The die maker would roll the die and that'd select who he'd give the dice set to... and now was his favorite part in figuring out whether he'd make the dice before or after meeting this person. He'd take out his lucky coin and flip it. No, it wasn't magic. Yes, he realized that was probably hypocritical.