andrew dice clay



dice
This Day in History

dice

For other uses, see either Die or Dice (disambiguation).
Typical role-playing dice, showing a variety of colors and styles. Note the older hand-inked green 12-sided die (showing an 11), manufactured before pre-inked dice were common. Many players collect or acquire a large number of mixed and unmatching dice.

A die (Old French de, from Latin datum "something given or played" [1]) is a small polyhedral object, usually cubical, used for generating random numbers or other symbols. This makes dice suitable as gambling devices, especially for craps or sic bo, or for use in non-gambling tabletop games.

Two standard six-sided pipped dice with rounded corners.

Traditionally, a die is seldom seen alone, and is rather one of a pair of identical dice that are sized to be comfortably rolled or thrown, together, from a user's hand. Because of this, the singular word "die" is rare, but treating "dice" as interchangeably singular or plural is less common; the plural form "dices" is rarer still.

A traditional die is a cube (often with corners slightly rounded), marked on each of its six faces with a different number of circular patches or pits called pips. All of these pips have the same appearance within a pair, or larger set of dice, and are sized for ease of recognizing the pattern the pips on one face form. The design as a whole is aimed at each die providing one randomly determined integer, in the range from one to six, with each of those values being equally likely.

Japanese die, with its distinctive oversized pip.

More generally, a variety of analogous devices are often described as dice, but necessarily in a context, or with a word or two preceding "die" or "dice", that avoids the assumption that traditional dice are intended. Such specialized dice may have cubical or other polyhedral shapes, with faces marked with various collections of symbols, and be used to produce other random results than one through six. There are also "loaded" or "crooked" dice (especially otherwise traditional ones), meant to produce skewed or even predictable results, for purposes of deception or amusement.

Contents

  • 1 Ordinary dice
  • 2 History
  • 3 Materials
    • 3.1 Precision dice
    • 3.2 Polyhedral dice
  • 4 Terms
    • 4.1 Dice Notation
    • 4.2 "Crooked" dice
      • 4.2.1 Loaded dice
      • 4.2.2 Cheat dice
      • 4.2.3 Shaved dice
  • 5 Variants
    • 5.1 Dice with faces other than digit sequences
    • 5.2 Non-cubical dice
      • 5.2.1 Standard variations
      • 5.2.2 Rarer variations
  • 6 Probability
  • 7 Application in role-playing games
  • 8 Use of dice for divination
  • 9 See also
  • 10 References
  • 11 External links

Ordinary dice

European-style, Chinese-style, and casino dice.

The common dice are small cubes 1 to 2 cm along an edge (16mm being the standard), whose faces are numbered from one to six (usually by patterns of dots called pips). It is traditional to assign pairs of numbers that total seven to opposite faces (it has been since at least classical antiquity); this implies that at one vertex the faces 1, 2 and 3 intersect. It leaves one other abstract design choice: the faces representing 1, 2 and 3 respectively can be placed in either clockwise or counterclockwise order about this vertex.

Dice are thrown to provide random numbers for gambling and other games and thus are a type of hardware random number generator. However, because the numbers on toy dice are marked with small indentations, slightly more material is removed from the higher numbered faces. This results in a small bias, and they do not provide fair (uniform) random numbers. The bias is reduced somewhat in the Japanese die with its oversized single pip (pictured). Casino dice have markings that are flush with the surface and come very close to providing true uniformly distributed random numbers.

Dice are thrown, singly or in groups, from the hand or from a cup or box designed for the purpose, onto a flat surface. The face of each die that is uppermost when it comes to rest provides the value of the throw. A typical dice game today is craps, wherein two dice are thrown at a time, and wagers are made on the total value of up-facing pips on the two dice. They are also frequently used to randomize allowable moves in board games such as Backgammon.

History

Knucklebone dice, made of Steatite

Dice were probably originally made from the ankle bones (specifically the talus or "astragalus") of hoofed animals (such as oxen), colloquially known as "knucklebones", which are approximately tetrahedral. Even today in English, dice are sometimes colloquially referred to as "bones", as in "shake them bones". Ivory, bone, wood, metal, and stone materials have been commonly used, though the use of plastics is now nearly universal. It is almost impossible to trace clearly the development of dice as distinguished from knucklebones, because ancient writers confused the two games. It is certain, however, that both were played in prehistoric times.

A collection of historical dice from Asia

The fact that dice have been used throughout the Orient from time immemorial, as has been proved by excavations from ancient tombs and from the Harappan civilization[1], seems to point clearly to an Asiatic origin. Dicing is mentioned as an Indian game in the Rig Veda and the Atharva Veda[2]. In its primitive form knucklebones was essentially a game of skill played by women and children. In a derivative form of knucklebones, the four sides of the bones received different values and were counted as with modern dice. Gambling with three or sometimes two dice was a very popular form of amusement in Greece, especially with the upper classes, and was an almost invariable accompaniment to banquets (symposia).

The Romans were passionate gamblers, especially in the luxurious days of the Roman Empire, and dicing was a favorite form, though it was forbidden except during the Saturnalia. Horace derided what he presented as a typical youth of the period, who wasted his time amid the dangers of dicing instead of taming his charger and giving himself up to the hardships of the chase. Throwing dice for money was the cause of many special laws in Rome. One of these stated that no suit could be brought by a person who allowed gambling in his house, even if he had been cheated or assaulted. Professional gamblers were common, and some of their loaded dice are preserved in museums. The common public-houses were the resorts of gamblers, and a fresco is extant showing two quarrelling dicers being ejected by the indignant host.

Tacitus states that the Germans were passionately fond of dicing, so much so, indeed, that, having lost everything, they would even stake their personal liberty. Centuries later, during the middle ages, dicing became the favourite pastime of the knights, and both dicing schools and guilds of dicers existed. After the downfall of feudalism the famous German mercenaries called landsknechts established a reputation as the most notorious dicing gamblers of their time. Many of the dice of the period were curiously carved in the images of men and beasts. In France both knights and ladies were given to dicing. This persisted through repeated legislation, including interdictions on the part of St. Louis in 1254 and 1256.

In China, India, Japan, Korea, and other Asiatic countries, dice have always been popular and are so still. The markings on Chinese dominoes evolved from the markings on dice, taken two at a time.

Materials

Precision backgammon dice

Dice have been made from a wide variety of materials throughout history, including stone, wood, and animal bones, and more recently, bakelite and plastic.

Precision dice

Precision casino dice, used for the game of craps, are made from cellulose acetate. These dice may have a polished finish, making them transparent, or a sand finish, making them translucent. Casino dice have their pips drilled, and then filled flush with a paint of the same specific gravity as the acetate, such that the dice remain in perfect balance. In casino play, a stick of 5 dice are used, all stamped with a matching serial number to prevent a cheat from substituting a die.

Precision backgammon dice are also made from acetate, or a similar material, with the pips filled in as is done with casino dice. While casino dice are noticeably larger than common dice, with sharp edges and corners, precision backgammon dice tend to be somewhat smaller. Their corners and edges are beveled to allow greater movement inside the dice cup and prevent chaotic rolls from damaging the playing surface.

Polyhedral dice

Metal dice, made of brass

It is unknown of what material the earliest polyhedral dice were made. A pair of icosahedral (20-sided) dice dating from Roman times are on display at the British Museum.[3]

Roughly cubical six-sided Roman dice made of wood, bone, ivory and lead have been discovered. It is possible that polyhedral dice were used by even earlier cultures.

Polyhedral dice are usually made of plastic, though infrequently metal, wooden, and semi-precious stone dice can be found. Early polyhedral dice from the 1970s and 1980s were made of a soft plastic that would easily wear as the die was used. Typical wear and tear would gradually round the corners and edges of the die until it was unusable. Modern polyhedral dice are typically made of high-impact plastic and can withstand years of use without visible wear.

Polyhedral dice can be purchased at most hobby stores in numerous combinations. In the early days of role-playing games, most dice came with the numbers uninked and players took great care in painting their sets of dice. Some twenty-sided dice of this era came numbered zero through nine twice; half of the numbers had to be painted a contrasting color to signify the "high" faces. Such a die could also double as a ten-sided die by ignoring the distinguishing coloring.

Terms

While the terms ace, deuce, trey, cater, cinque and sice are hardly common today having been replaced with the ordinary names of the numbers one to six, they are still used by some professional gamblers to describe the different sides of the dice. Ace is from the Latin as, meaning "a unit" [2]; the others are the numbers 2–6 in old French.

Dice Notation

Main article: Dice notation

Often the names of the dice appear in formulas for calculating game parameters: e.g., hit points. "6d8+10", for example, will yield a number between 16 (6×1+10) and 58 (6×8+10), as it means "Roll an eight-sided die six times and add ten to the total." Occasionally they may be written "1d6×10+20"; this means "Roll one six-sided die. Multiply it by ten and add twenty."

"Crooked" dice

"Crooked dice" refers to dice that have been altered in some way to change the distribution of the dice's outcome.

Loaded dice

A loaded or gaffed die is a die that has been tampered with to land with a selected side facing upwards more often than it would simply by chance. There are methods of creating loaded dice, including having some edges round and other sharp and slightly off square faces. If the dice are not transparent, weights can be added to one side or the other. They can be modified to produce winners ("passers") or losers ("miss-outs"). "Tappers" have a drop of mercury in a reservoir at the center of the cube, with a capillary tube leading to another mercury reservoir at the side of the cube. The load is activated by tapping the die on the table so that the mercury leaves the center and travels to the side. Often one can see the circle of the cut used to remove the face and bury the weight. In a professional die, the weight is inserted in manufacture; in the case of a wooden die, this can be done by carving the die around a heavy inclusion, like a pebble around which a tree has grown.

A variable loaded die is hollow with a small weight and a semi-solid substance inside, usually wax, whose melting point is just lower than the temperature of the human body. This allows the cheater to change the loading of the die by breathing on it or holding it firmly in hand, causing the wax to melt and the weight to drift down, making the chosen opposite face more likely to land up. A less common type of variable die can be made by inserting a magnet into the die and embedding a coil of wire in the game table. Then, either leave the current off and let the die roll unchanged or run current through the coil to increase the likelihood that the north side or the south side will land on the bottom depending on the direction of the current.

Plastic dice can be biased to roll a certain number by heating them (for example in an oven) with the desired face upward, so that the plastic will soften slightly and "pool" at the opposite (bottom) side of the die without showing much, if any, visible distortion.

Transparent acetate dice, used in all reputable casinos, are harder to tamper with.

Cheat dice

Cheat dice (see below) are often sold as loaded dice but usually are not technically loaded.

Shaved dice

A die can be "shaved" on one side i.e. slightly shorter in one dimension, making it slightly rectangular and thus affecting its outcome. One countermeasure employed by casinos against shaved dice is to measure the dice with a micrometer.

Variants

Dice with faces other than digit sequences

As noted, the faces of most dice are labelled using an unbroken series of whole numbers, starting at one (or zero), expressed with either pips or digits. Common exceptions include:

  • color dice (e.g., with the colors of the playing pieces used in a game)
  • Poker dice, with labels reminiscent of playing cards. Several varieties exist, but the most common contain the following pattern: 9♣, 10♦, Jack (blue), Queen (green), King (red), A♠
  • dice with letters (e.g. in Boggle)
  • average dice (2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5) (In some war games, units are identified as regulars or irregulars. Because regulars are more predictable, the strength of a regular unit is multiplied by an average die. For this reason, average dice are jocularly called regular dice.)
  • cheat dice, such as:
    • one face each with two through five, and two with sixes, or
    • for craps, a pair of dice in which one die has five on each face, and its mate has a mixture of twos and sixes, guaranteeing rolls of seven or 11.
  • dice with a single sequence of markings repeated multiple times, for example:
    • a cubical die numbered twice from 1 to 3, or thrice from 1 to 2.
    • icosohedral dice numbered twice from 1 to 10 (commonly used in Dungeons & Dragons before the popularization of ten-sided dice).
    • Fudge dice, numbered twice from −1 to 1, represented as −, blank, +.
Doubling cube
  • random direction dice, also known as scatter dice. The dice have arrows on each side; the outcome of a roll is a random direction. Scatter dice are used in tabletop wargames such as Warhammer Fantasy Battle to determine random movements of troops, wind direction or direction of misfired arms. Note that this is an unusual case where the die is read not according to which symbol is shown on its uppermost face, but its compass orientation.
  • A doubling cube with the numbers 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, and 64 is used in backgammon and some other boardgames. This die is not actually rolled; it is used to denote the current stakes of the game.
  • Some board games use dice with positive and negative numbers for use in gain or loss of something.
  • Sicherman dice, a pair having the same odds of rolling a given sum as a pair of standard six-sided dice, but with different markings: one die has 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8, and the other has 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, and 4. Sicherman dice are the only such alternative arrangement if positive numbers are used.
  • I Ching dice such as
    • Eight-sided dice bearing the eight trigrams
    • Six-sided dice bearing yin and yang twice each, and old yin and old yang once each
  • "Projector dice" which are clear and marked only on one of each pair of opposing faces. For a "six"-sided die, e.g., a clear twelve sided-shape is used. Rolled on an overhead projector such a die will have the top or bottom marking equally readable.

Non-cubical dice

Barrel Dice

Some dice are polyhedra other than cubes in shape. They were once almost exclusively used by fortune-tellers and in other occult practices, but they have become popular lately (at least since the early 1950s) among players of wargames, trading card games, German-style board games, and role-playing games. Although polyhedral dice are a relative novelty during modern times, some ancient cultures appear to have used them in games (as evidenced by the presence of two icosahedral dice dating from the days of ancient Rome on display in the British Museum). Such dice are typically plastic, and have faces bearing numerals rather than patterns of dots. Reciprocally symmetric numerals are distinguished with a dot in the lower right corner (6. vs 9.) or by being underlined (6 vs 9).

The platonic solids are commonly used to make dice of 4, 6, 8, 12, and 20 faces. Other shapes can be found to make dice with 2, 5, 7, 10, 16, 24, 30, 34, 50, or 100 sides, but other than the 10 sided, they are rarely used. (See Zocchihedron.) The 4 sided platonic solid is difficult to roll, and a few games like Daldøs use a 4 sided rolling pin instead.

20-sided die 10-sided die 4-sided die

A large number of different probability distributions can be obtained using these dice in various ways; for example, 10-sided dice (or 20-sided dice labeled with single digits) are often used in pairs to produce a linearly-distributed random percentage. Summing multiple dice approximates a normal distribution (a "bell curve"), while eliminating high or low throws can be used to skew the distribution in various ways. Using these techniques, games can closely approximate the real probability distributions of the events they simulate.

There is some controversy over whether manufacturing processes create genuinely "fair" dice (dice that roll with even distributions over their number span). Casino dice are legally required to be fair; those used by all others hold no such requirement.

Spherical dice also exist; these function like the plain cubic dice, but have an octahedral internal cavity in which a weight moves which causes them to settle in one of six orientations when rolled. However, these dice are somewhat awkward in use because they require a flat and level surface to roll properly — an uneven surface often causes them to stop partway between two numbers, while a sloped surface will obviously cause the dice to keep rolling.

Cowry shells or coins may be used as a kind of two-sided dice. (Because of their shape, cowry shells probably do not yield a uniform distribution.)

Standard variations

A matched Platonic-solids set of five dice, (from left) tetrahedron, cube, octahedron, dodecahedron and icosahedron.

The most common non-cubical dice — often sold in sets of five or six that are each differently shaped but with the same pair of background and marking colors — include one each of the five Platonic solids, which are highly symmetrical. The six-die versions add the pentagonal trapezohedron, in which the faces (identical to one another as to angles and edge lengths) each have two different lengths of side, and three different sizes of angle; the corners at which multiple faces meet are also of two different kinds.

Sides Shape Notes
4 tetrahedron Each face has three numbers: they are arranged such that the upright number (which counts) is the same on all three visible faces. Alternatively, all of the sides have the same number in the lowest edge and no number on the top. This die does not roll well and thus it is usually thrown into the air instead.
6 cube A common die. The sum of the numbers on opposite faces is seven.
8 octahedron Each face is triangular; looks something like two Egyptian pyramids attached at the base. Usually, the sum of the opposite faces is 9.
10 pentagonal trapezohedron Each face is kite-shaped; five of them meet at the same sharp corner (as at the top of the diagram in this row), and five at another equally sharp one; about halfway between them, a different group of three faces converges at each of ten blunter corners. The ten faces usually bear numbers from zero to nine, rather than one to ten (zero being read as "ten" in many applications), and often all odd numbered faces converge at the same sharp corner, and the even ones at the other.
12 dodecahedron Each face is a regular pentagon.
20 icosahedron Faces are equilateral triangles. Typically, opposite faces add to twenty-one. A Roman icosahedron die from the 2nd century AD has been found, though the game it was used for is not known.[3]

Rarer variations

Sides Shape Notes
2 cylinder This is nothing more than a coin shape with 1 marked on one side and 2 on the other. While some tasks in roleplaying require flipping a coin, it is usually referred to as such, and not as rolling a two-sided die. It is possible, however, to find dice of this sort for purchase, but they are rare, and can typically be found among other joke dice.
3 Rounded-off triangular prism This is essentially a rounded-off triangular prism, intended to be rolled like a rolling-pin style die. The die is rounded-off at the edges to make it impossible for it to somehow land on the triangular sides, which makes it look a bit like a jewel. When the die is rolled, one edge (rather than a side) appears facing upwards. On either side of each edge the same number is printed (from 1 to 3). The numbers on either side of the up-facing edge are read as the result of the die roll. Another possible shape is the "American Football" or "Rugby ball" shape, where the ends are pointed (with rounded points) rather than just rounded.
5 Triangular prism This is a prism that is thin enough to land either on its "edge" or "face". When landing on an edge, the result is displayed by digits (2–4) close to the "pyramid"'s top. The triangular faces are labeled with the digits 1 and 5.
7 Pentagonal prism Similar in constitution to the 5-sided die. When landing on an edge, the topmost edge has pips for 1–5. The pentagonal faces are labeled with the digits 6 and 7. This kind of die is particularly odd since it has pips for five of its results and digits for two of them. Seven sided dice are used in a seven-player variant of backgammon. Some variants have heptagonal ends and rectangular faces.
12 rhombic dodecahedron Each face is in the shape of a rhombus.
14 heptagonal dipyramid Each face is in the shape of an isosceles triangle.
16 octagonal dipyramid Each face is in the shape of an isosceles triangle.
24 tetrakis hexahedron Each face is in the shape of an isosceles triangle.
24 deltoidal icositetrahedron Each face is in the shape of a kite (geometry).
30 rhombic triacontahedron Each face is in the shape of a rhombus (diamond-shaped).
50 icosakaipentagonal dipyramid Just like the 14- and 16-sided dice, the faces of the 50-sided die are isosceles triangles, although very narrow.
100 Dice of this sort are rare. See main article.

The full geometric set of "uniform fair dice" (with all congruent sides) are:

  • Platonic solids: 5 regular polyhedra: (4, 6, 8, 12, 20 sides)
  • Catalan solids: 13 Archimedean duals: (12, 24, 30, 48, 60, 120 sides)
  • Bipyramids: infinite set of prism duals, triangle faces: (6, 8, 10, 12, ... sides)
  • Trapezohedrons: infinite set of antiprism duals, kite faces: (6, 8, 10, 12, ... sides)

Rolling-pin style dice are usually made so that all the faces they may actually land on are congruent, so they are equally fair.

Probability

For a single roll of an s-sided die, the probability of rolling each value, 1 through s, is exactly 1/s. This is an example of a discrete uniform distribution. For a double roll, however, the total of both rolls is not evenly distributed, but is distributed in a triangular curve. For a six-sided die, for example, the probability distribution is as follows:

Probability distribution for the sum of two six-sided dice
Sum
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
Probability
1/36
2/36
3/36
4/36
5/36
6/36
5/36
4/36
3/36
2/36
1/36
Probability (simplified)
1/36
1/18
1/12
1/9
5/36
1/6
5/36
1/9
1/12
1/18
1/36

For three or more die rolls, the curve becomes more bell-shaped with each additional die (according to the central limit theorem). The exact probability distribution Fi for any number of dice i can be calculated as the repeated convolution of the single-die probability distribution with itself.

For example, in the triangular curve described above,

Equivalently, one can calculate the probability p that an s-sided die, rolled i times, will yield some sum k using combinations:

The probability of rolling any exact sequence of numbers is simply . For example, the chance of rolling 1, 2, and 3 in that order with three rolls of a six-sided die is , or . Rolling any single number i times in a row, regardless of which number, is s times more likely, at a chance.

Application in role-playing games

Full set of matching dice used in roleplaying: a d4, d6, d8, d12, d20, and two d10s for percentile: ones and tens.

The fantasy role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons introduced the use of polyhedral dice during modern timescitation needed] and paved the way for their use in other role-playing games, using 20-, 12-, 10-, 8- and 4-sided dice in addition to the traditional 6 sided die. Such dice are often sold in sets.

Players use polyhedral dice together in a number of ways. For example, a d10 can be used in conjunction with a d6 instead of using a d20. If the d6 displays a 1, 2 or 3, the number on the d10 is resolved as 1–10. If the d6 displays a 4, 5 or 6, the number shown on the d10 is resolved to 11–20 ("1" is 11, "2" is 12, etc.). In cases like this, almost any sided die can be used as a "resolver".

Two d10 are often used to generate a number between 1 and 100. When tossing these dice, the player indicates which die is "high" (representing the tens position). This may be done by color, or using a custom die marked with multiples of ten. Similar methods can be used for additional digits.

Use of dice for divination

Some people believe that dice can be used for divination. Using dice for such a purpose is called cleromancy. A pair of standard 6-sided dice is generally used.

Astrological dice are a specialized set of three 12-sided dice for divination, using the concepts of astrology and containing astrological symbols for the planets, the zodiac signs and the astrological houses. The first die represents planets, the Sun, the Moon, and two nodes (North Node and South Node). The second die represents the 12 zodiac signs, and the third represents the 12 houses. In simplified terms, the planets, etc. could represent the 'actor'; the zodiac signs could represent the 'role' being played by the actor; and the house could represent the 'scene' in which the actor plays.

Rune dice are a specialized set of dice for divination (runecasting), using the symbols of the runes printed on the dice.

An icosahedron is used to provide the answers of a Magic 8-Ball, which is conventionally used to provide advice on yes-or-no questions.

See also

  • Fuzzy dice - car accessory
  • Craps - on the casino game.
  • Liar's dice - dice gambling game.
  • Mexico - dice gambling game.
  • Pig - dice gambling game.
  • Threes - street dice game.
  • Yahtzee - modern dice game.
  • Storm - a traditional Asian dice game

References

  1. ^ e.g. Possehl, Gregory. Meluhha. in: J. Reade (ed.) The Indian Ocean in Antiquity. London: Kegan Paul Intl. 1996a, 133–208
  2. ^ 2.3, 4.38, 6.118, 7.52, 7.109
  3. ^ a b Thompson, Clive (December 02, 2003). Ancient Roman dungeonmastering. Collision Detection. Retrieved on 2006-06-26.
  • Persi Diaconis and Joseph B. Keller. "Fair Dice". The American Mathematical Monthly, 96(4):337-339, 1989. (Discussion of dice that are fair "by symmetry" and "by continuity".)
  • Bias and Runs in Dice Throwing and Recording: A Few Million Throws. G. R. Iverson. W. H. Longcour, et al. Psychometrika, Vol. 36, No. 1, March 1971
  • Knizia, Reiner (1999). Dice Games Properly Explained. Elliot Right Way Books. ISBN 0-7160-2112-9.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
Category:Dice
  • Wolfram MathWorld: Dice Analysis of dice probabilities, also features Uspenski's work on rolling multiple dice.
  • Fair Dice is an illustrated Math Games column about all the possible fair dice, and the mathematical reasons why other shapes are not fair.
  • Roman Board Games (See, in particular, Tali and Tesserae.)
  • Properties of Dice is a page describing all solids that make for provably fair dice.
  • Worlds Largest Dice Collection Links, Photos, Information about dice
  • Computer Simulation of Irregular Dice
  • Chessex manufactures a large assortment of dice used for role playing games.

This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

Search Term: "Dice"

ice
dive
die
dic
dce
duce
dico
dace
bice
fice
sice
cice
doce
dide
dica
eice
dibe
dicce

dice news and dice articles

Here's our top rated dice links for the day:

DICE Canada Craps out 

Voodoo Extreme - Oct 05 6:15 PM
On the morning of Oct 2nd hours after EA finalized the buyout of DICE, it closed the Canadian subsidiary DICE Canada (Developers of BF: Vietnam and BF2: Special forces). There were 28 employees at the Canadian office.

EA Closes DICE Canada Offices 
Gamasutra - Oct 05 11:04 AM
Following news at the beginning of the week that major publisher Electronic Arts had finalized its acquisition of Swedish-headquartered Digital Illusions CE (aka DICE) development studio, sources from DICE's Ontario-based branch office have confirmed that the DICE Canada studio has been shuttered. According to official reports, the announcement that the studio would be closed came shortly after

Skins can roll the dice and make defenses pay 
Richmond Times-Dispatch - Oct 05 3:52 AM
ASHBURN -- They are known as gadget plays, flea-flickers and trick plays. Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs calls them a roll of the dice. And when Gibbs was calling plays for the Redskins, he was not above rolling the dice to call one of his gadget plays.

EA confirms DICE Canada closure ( News ) 
EuroGamer - Oct 05 8:50 AM
Trying to relocate staff. If you would like to comment on this article, then you must be logged in! Didn't EA just buy DICE a week ago? That was nice of them to immediately close the office. DICE is now officially rubbish.

EA confirms DICE Canada closure ( News ) 
EuroGamer - Oct 05 8:49 AM
Electronic Arts has confirmed it has closed down Digital Illusions Canada, the Ontario-based division of DICE - the studio officially acquired by EA only days ago.

Thank you for viewing the dice page dice. 

 

Ever wondered what others are searching for in relation to dice? Now you can see.  Below is a listing of  what everyone else is searching for in regard to dice.

1. dice
2. andrew dice clay
3. dice games
4. dice roller
5. big dice
6. fuzzy dice
7. dice wars
8. flaming dice
9. tumbling dice
10. dice dealer .com
11. native american dice game
12. finley quaye dice
13. electronic dice
14. lcr dice game
15. large dice
16. bouncing dice
17. giant dice
18. dice mp3
19. large foam dice
20. roll the dice
21. dice dungeon monster yugioh
22. dice game rules
23. liars dice
24. dice box magic
25. dice clip art
26. dice game
27. foam dice
28. 50 sided dice
29. black dice
30. dice dungeon monster play yugioh
31. how many sides would a dozen dice have in total
32. liar's dice
33. dice jobs
34. dice stickers
35. andrew dice clay nursery rhymes
36. casino dice
37. dice tattoos
38. 10000 dice game rules
39. dice job fair
40. metal dice
41. snap dice game
42. dungeon dice monsters
43. 'andrew dice clay photographs'
44. dice direction game
45. dice finley quaye
46. educational dice games
47. habbo hotel dice rigger
48. pirate dice game
49. rpg dice
50. dice clay
51. dice games rules
52. find desktop jobs at dice
53. finley quaye- dice
54. tumbling dice rolling stones
55. andrew dice clay photos
56. dice setting
57. habbo dice rigger
58. math games using dice
59. dice manufacturers
60. dice technology jobs
61. dragon dice
62. giant foam dice
63. how to make loaded dice
64. inflatable dice
65. rolling dice
66. blue dice
67. bunco dice clip art
68. koplow dice
69. large rubber dice
70. poker dice computer game
71. world series of dice
72. andrew dice clay mp3
73. bandai dice action figure marco rocca
74. bulk dice
75. dice cheats
76. dice crafts
77. dice tower
78. find is jobs at dice
79. pewter dice
80. red dice
81. ship captain crew dice game
82. dice beads
83. dice games for kids
84. dice tattoo
85. dice tray
86. dungeon dice monsters online game
87. greed dice game
88. polyhedral dice
89. video of dice setters
90. wooden dice
91. 6 dice games rules
92. andrew dice clay cnn
93. animated dice
94. blank dice
95. buy dice
96. buy or sell pch potato dices online
97. chess dice
98. diamond charms 14k gold and diamond dice charm
99. dice towers
100. engineering jobs uk at dice
101. games with dice
102. glow in the dark dice
103. pirate dice games
104. playing dice
105. 100 sided dice
106. dice motorcycle parts
107. dice on motorcycles
108. dice pictures
109. dice roll
110. glow dice
111. pair of dice
112. pink dice
113. polyhedra dice
114. se dice de mi mp3
115. wood dice
116. yellow fuzzy dice
117. alien dice
118. buy fluffy dice
119. d2 dice
120. dice cup
121. fla free dice
122. flaming dice tattoos
123. how to play farkle dice
124. information magic chef food processor slice dice machine
125. irony game dice server
126. polyhedra dice set
127. rules for street dice
128. rules for the dice game
129. six sided dice
130. 10 sided dice
131. 5 dice computer game
132. andrew dice clay sounds
133. best appetizer recipes dice games
134. como se dice
135. custom dice
136. d3 dice
137. dice and k9
138. dice clipart
139. dice electronics
140. dice finley
141. dice game directions
142. dice games instructions
143. dice pic
144. dice rolling
145. find html jobs at dice
146. free dice games
147. how do you play dice
148. how to play dice
149. how to play liar's dice
150. online dice
151. 48 sided dice
152. a chi mi dice
153. computer technology jobs at dice
154. d&d dice
155. d16 dice
156. d5 dice
157. dice font
158. dice manufacturer
159. dice poker chips
160. dice probability chart
161. dice supplies
162. digital dice
163. dirty dice game
164. free download computer dice deluxe game
165. game board dice ball
166. gamescience dice
167. missouri western basketball jessica dice
168. no dice
169. pink fuzzy dice
170. poker dice conputer game
171. shake dice k9 mp3
172. best appetizer recipes for dice games
173. dice control
174. dice lady red
175. dice percentages chart
176. dice raw
177. dice william orbit
178. farkle dice game
179. free 10000 dice game downloads
180. gold dice
181. islam dice
182. jolly roger dice
183. loaded dice
184. love dice
185. math dice games
186. par a dice casino
187. pictures of dice
188. poker dice rules
189. sided dice
190. 10k dice game for windows
191. andrew dice clay official site
192. bandai dice toys
193. cards dice and accessories
194. chessex dice uk
195. computerized dice
196. dice bar sign
197. dice products
198. dice rules
199. dice suckers
200. different dice games
201. dundgeon dice monsters
202. free dice ten thousand games
203. god doesn't play at dice with the universe
204. habbo uk dice riggers
205. information on magic chef food processor slice dice machine
206. liar's dice download
207. lighted playing dice
208. matthew david dice boomer
209. online dice games
210. pirate dice rules
211. poker dice
212. rolling stones tumbling dice
213. royal poker dice game
214. silver dice
215. yu gi oh dungeon dice game
216. zebra stripe fuzzy dice
217. a chi mi dice blue
218. baby blue dice
219. bunco dice game
220. chessex dice
221. computerized dungeon and dragons dice
222. custom made dice
223. deadly dice neopets
224. dice applet roll
225. dice by william orbit
226. dice car games
227. dice clay golf
228. dice cufflinks
229. dice earrings
230. dice games for children
231. dice ipod
232. dice jobalert for agent pb_exec alawar
233. dice of life
234. dice rolling programs
235. dice sculpture
236. educational dice
237. festival tall take roll of dice
238. final fantasy dice rpg
239. font free dice casino
240. fonts free dice
241. formula de dice
242. free dice fla file
243. game dice
244. history of dice
245. irony dice
246. jobalert for agent pb_exec dice alawar
247. jumbo dice
248. lcr dice
249. left right center dice game
250. loaded dice rc aircraft
251. lrc dice game
252. my dice mp3
253. play liar's dice for free perudo
254. rules for 10,000 dice game
255. se dice mi
256. setting the dice to win at craps
257. ship captain & crew dice rules
258. slice and dice
259. sudoku dice game
260. ten thousand dice game free online
261. tetrahedral dice
262. uk dice counters plastic price game parts
263. white spherical 1 to 49 wmf dice
264. ''pirate dice game''
265. 16 mm dice
266. 20 sided dice
267. a&e history channel craps dice
268. andre nickatina dice of life
269. andrew dice clay audio
270. andrew dice clay dead
271. art dice
272. backgammon dice roll cheats
273. battle dice
274. d&d dice sets
275. daniel dice
276. dice 7-11
277. dice chocolate
278. dice city roller
279. dice computer software career resources
280. dice downloads free game
281. dice game instructions
282. dice games children
283. dice games left center right dice
284. dice job search
285. dice lamp
286. dice layout whirl bet
287. dice odds
288. dice on fire
289. dice thrower programs
290. dice with face
291. dices
292. digital dice design
293. directions for the dice game farkel
294. download dice rigger
295. download dungeon dice monsters online
296. dragon dice new
297. dragon dice swamp stalkers
298. dungeons and dragons dice
299. fanco dice game
300. fargo dice game
301. farkle dice
302. flame dice
303. flaming dice tattoos web site
304. foreplay dice
305. free download computer dice games
306. free download dice games
307. fuzzy car dice
308. game dice ball pea
309. greed dice game instructions
310. hemingway+ che ti dice la patria
311. how to load dice
312. ijnexpensive jewelry with dice on nit
313. large 60 mm diameter white spherical dice
314. leather dice shaker
315. left, right, middle dice
316. liar's dice rules
317. lo que dice justi
318. making paper dice
319. me dice el salvador
320. mini cooper dice ipod interface review
321. new dice games
322. no dices mas
323. online dice roller
324. petroleum engineering careers at dice
325. pictures blue dice
326. pig dice game
327. printable dice
328. purchase kismet dice game
329. que dice lopez obrador
330. replacement dice + trivial pursuit
331. specialty dice
332. tattle tale dice box magic trick
333. teaching and dice
334. three dice
335. tumblin' dice
336. 10 led electronic dice
337. 10000 game with dice
338. 49 sided dice
339. andrew dice clay stand up
340. andrew dice clay videos
341. backgammon auto dice roller
342. beer dice
343. bone dice
344. bunko dice game rules
345. chessex electronic dice
346. chi mi dice mp3
347. children's large dice for counting
348. club dice casino
349. como se dice asheville nc
350. como se dice welcome home en espanol
351. computer engineering careers at dice
352. custom car dice
353. custom printed dice
354. david dice
355. dice + rap
356. dice centerpiece
357. dice corporation
358. dice dare
359. dice divas
360. dice divination
361. dice finley quaye & william orbit
362. dice fire
363. dice game farkle
364. dice game ten thousand rules
365. dice games to play at stagette
366. dice high tech job
367. dice inc investor relations
368. dice pattern
369. dice programs for backgammon
370. dice raw- thin line
371. dice reading
372. dice table
373. dice template
374. dice tray leather
375. dice trophy
376. dice wars game
377. dior casino dice purse
378. diorpurse dice gambler
379. directions for liar's dice game
380. dragon dice starter
381. dungeons & dragons dice roller
382. farckle dice game rules
383. free dice roller
384. free fonts dice
385. fuzzy dice 6 zebra
386. fuzzy dice yellow
387. fuzzy stuffed dice
388. gaming dice suppliers
389. giant blank foam dice
390. greedy dice game
391. greedy dice rules
392. how to make weighted dice
393. java code dice game
394. jla dice
395. laser custom dice
396. liar's dice tutorial
397. loaded dice movie dvd
398. loco dice
399. lottery dice
400. manufacturing fuzzy dice
401. math games for kids cards and dice
402. mc smalley roll the dice
403. myspace cursor dice
404. numbered dice
405. online digital dice
406. origin of dice
407. pewter dice rpg
408. pink ten sided dice
409. pirate dice
410. possible outcomes 2 dice
411. posters and prints movies comedy pair o dice
412. probability dice problem
413. random dice roller
414. red fuzzy dice
415. rolled bones dice game
416. rules for dice game craps
417. rules on 10 000 dice game
418. sara dice bend spay
419. se dice de mi
420. semi dice
421. si tu me dices ven
422. siddharta, my dice
423. the dice man
424. tlae dice
425. urban dice
426. virtual dice
427. written rules for outdoor lawn dice game
428. 10000 dice
429. 12 sided dice
430. 5 dice game
431. 5/8 inch precision dice
432. 6 foam dice
433. 6 on dice
434. 8mm dice
435. a chi mi dice - blue
436. a chi mi dice mp3
437. andrew dice clay nursery rymes
438. andrew dice clay quotes
439. andrew dice clay soundboard
440. average number of rolls of dice to make point
441. backgammon dice
442. backgammon dice images for web pages
443. best appetizer recipes for dice game
444. bilge dice
445. black dice mp3
446. cards and dice
447. cards dice math games children
448. casa dice
449. chappelle dice
450. clip art dice
451. collapsable dice stick
452. collecting dice
453. color dice
454. como se dice ave de mal aguero en ingles
455. compass dice
456. craps dice
457. custom etched laser dice
458. d&d dice generator
459. dave chappelle world dice