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Collectible dice games Patterned after the success of collectible card games, a number of collectible dice games have been published. Although most of these collectible dice games are long out-of-print, there is still a small following for many of them. Some games are based solely on the actual use of the dice! Dice games are compact, simple, and often very easy to learn. When it comes to being easily portable and accessible, they beat out board games on many fronts. Many of us think of old school dice games like Yahtzee, but there are so many on the market now it is hard to keep up! Play Online Dice Games was added by fcbookdev in Aug 2015 and the latest update was made in Aug 2015. The list of alternatives was updated Feb 2020. It's possible to update the information on Play Online Dice Games or report it as discontinued, duplicated or spam.
Activities
By Kevin Naulls, CBC Parents Staff
Illustrations by Sharon Gardener
Apr 7, 2020
If you're looking for something fun and time-consuming with next to no clean-up, then you're in the right place.
Different Dice Games
When it comes to dice games, you probably know your Boggle from your Yahtzee!
So I'm not here to tell you about those — when you know, you know.
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But how about some new games to add to your list? To mix things up? That'd be nice, right? Right. Let's schedule a Google Hangout and play some dice, y'all.
To play these games, you only need dice and a pen and paper to keep track of scores. The number of dice varies, so if you're not a family that collects cool dice, start searching those traditional board game boxes.
Going Somewhere?
Game Of Dice
Click the picture above for a bigger version of our rules card you can print out!
I need to be completely transparent here and say I made this game up. I was researching dice games and a lot of them had very similar rules. I thought, 'um, Kevin, no kid is going to play the same game four different ways just because there are four different titles.'
I've road-tested this one personally and it's very fun.
Basically, you pick a destination — somewhere you've always wanted to go. You're not going anywhere right now, so it's a good time to use your imagination. When you've picked, find out the distance in kilometres from your origin to the end destination. (I just Googled it.)
Then, get rolling. For shorter trips, use one die. And for longer distances, use two or three.
And you can really design this game for your own needs. You can add the dice together to have your distance measured (for example, if you roll a 3 and a 2, you've travelled 5 kilometres). Or if you are really going the distance, try using the dice rolled to form the largest number (for example, if you roll a 3 and a 2, the highest number would be 32 — so you've travelled 32 kilometres).
A casino game. A fun idea that I just thought of as I write this is you could theme your dinner to the destination. So, work hard to get to, say, Mexico, and then have tacos for dinner. They aren't just for Tuesdays, friends.
Bunco
Click the picture above for a bigger version of our rules card you can print out!
Ever played Bunco before? It's a dice game classic. And the word Bunco is cacophonous and you know what's fun for kids? Cacophony, baby.
To play, you need nine dice. That's a lot of dice, but I also learned from writing this that a lot of families have jars of dice. When I was a kid, a neighbourhood family had a jar of cheese balls in their pantry and I thought that was cool.
Divide your family into teams and get rolling.
Each round has a number allocated to it: 1 through 6.
For round one, your goal is to roll ones. For round two, your goal is to roll twos. And so on. For every correct roll, you get a point! So, if you rolled two ones in round one, that's two points.
At the end of six rounds, the team with the most points wins.
Beat That
Click the picture above for a bigger version of our rules card you can print out!
We've all heard a kid blurt out 'beat that' after doing something like a cartwheel or going down a slide really fast.
Well now those playground antics are coming to dice games.
Best Dice Games
Beat that is very simple, but simple is still fun. This is also a really great game for kids who are learning about unit values.
You need two dice minimum, or up to six. Play batman vs superman.
Each round, players roll their dice and have to create the biggest number from the numbers rolled. If you rolled a 5 and a 6, your highest number is 65. Make it trickier with more dice — if you roll a 6, 2, 4, 5, your biggest number would be 6,542.
The highest number scores a point each round. Play until you get tired.
Run For It
Click the picture above for a bigger version of our rules card you can print out!
This game requires six dice and is all about sequences.
To create a 'run' means to have a sequence of any size, be it 1-2, 1-2-3, 1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4-5 or 1-2-3-4-5-6.
Each roll, look for any sequences formed (like 1-2-3). Every sequence gets five points. That's right, we're also going to be learning our five multiplication tables just through scoring.
For a bit of additional context, the rolls must be ordered sequentially, so if you rolled 1,6,2,4,2,2 you would not get any points. But if you rolled 1,2,3,5,6,3 you'd get 10 points because there is a sequence with 1-2-3 and another with 5-6.
First player to 100 points wins!
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For a bit of additional context, the rolls must be ordered sequentially, so if you rolled 1,6,2,4,2,2 you would not get any points. But if you rolled 1,2,3,5,6,3 you'd get 10 points because there is a sequence with 1-2-3 and another with 5-6.
First player to 100 points wins!
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