These bots do not play intelligently. Most flooders simply make the bots answer randomly, or not at all. Their purpose is not to win—it is to overwhelm. Bot flooders are often used in "trolling" communities as a way to crash a game, waste time, or frustrate the host.
While the user initiating the flood might view it as a harmless prank, the consequences for the classroom environment are immediate and disruptive.
The availability of these tools on platforms like GitHub and Greasy Fork has popularized a "cheat culture" among students. Many scripts go beyond flooding, offering features such as: every question correctly. Manipulating in-game currency (tokens and XP).
The fleeting satisfaction of seeing "200 players joined" is not worth the potential suspension, the disappointed teacher, or the reputation damage.