
Dice games are games that use or incorporate one or more dice as their sole or central component, usually as a random device.
Traditional
- Astronomical chess
- Backgammon
- Balut
- Bar dice
- Bầu cua cá cọp
- Beer die
- Beetle
- Bidou
- Biscuit
- Bo Bing (Pua Tiong Chiu)
- Bunco
- Cacho Alalay
- Cee-lo
- Chaupar
- Chō-han
- Choboichi
- Chuck-a-luck
- Crag
- Craps / Seven-Eleven
- Crown and Anchor
- Daldøs
- Dayakattai
- Dice Chess
- Drop Dead
- Dudo
- Farkle
- Generala
- Glückshaus (House of Fortune)
- Hazard
- High jinks
- Hoo Hey How
- Jacquet
- Liar’s Dice
- Macao
- Mexico
- Mia
- Midnight
- Mumchance
- Mutschelspiele
- Passe-dix
- Pencil cricket
- Petals Around the Rose
- Pig
- Poker dice
- Pugasaing
- Rattle and snap
- Sa’-ro
- Sevens, elevens, and doubles
- Ship, captain, and crew
- Shut the box
- Sic Bo
- Three man
- Tien Gow
- Trictrac
- Yacht
- Yatzy
- Zambales Dice Game
Proprietary
- Animal Husbandry
- Boggle
- Button Men
- Can’t Stop
- Catan Dice Game
- Cosmic Wimpout
- Cthulhu Dice
- Dead Man’s Dice
- Dice Throne
- Diceball!
- Don’t Go to Jail
- Elder Sign
- The Game
- Kismet
- Las Vegas
- Ludo
- Owzthat
- Pandemic: The Cure
- Pass the Pigs
- Perquackey
- Pirateer
- Quarriors!
- Roll for the Galaxy
- Roll Player
- Sagrada
- Scribbage
- Snout!
- To Court the King
- Yahtzee
- Zombie Dice
Collectible dice games
Patterned after the success of collectible card games, a number of collectible dice games have been published.[1] Although most of these collectible dice games are long out-of-print, there is still a small following for many of them.
Some collectible dice games include:
- Battle Dice
- Cookie Fu
- Demon Dice
- Dicemaster: Cities of Doom (1996 game)
- Dice Masters (2012[verification needed] system designed for Quarriors! that expanded to other games)
- Diceland
- Dragon Dice
- Star Trek: The Next Generation Collectible Dice Game
See also
References
- ^ “Collectible Dice Games | WizKids”. 6 January 2015.