• @[email protected]
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    621 year ago

    I got by with one set until I started DMing. Ever since then, dice make up about 70% of my carbon footprint.

    • @VelvetStorm
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      101 year ago

      Ya, well, I have a goblin brain, and I need all the pretty click-clacks.

  • @Dagnet
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    1 year ago

    Okay, your spell hits, now roll 12d6 for damage

  • @YoFrodo
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    191 year ago

    Besides damage dice you’ll need at minimum two different D20 sets for DnD. One extra so the bad set can sit in Dice Jail™ until it’s learned it’s lesson.

  • Zagorath
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    181 year ago

    Transcription:

    A screenshot of a Tweet by “castle mac steven” @CastleMacSteven

    Me: *buying dice at the game store.*

    Clerk: Sure you only want the one set?

    Me: yep! It’s got all of the 7 dice I’ll ever need for #dnd

    Clerk: okay then! *under their breath: “See you soon”*

    Me: what?

    Clerk: what?

    Dated: 11:28 AM · 5/28/19 · Twitter for iPhone

    1,415 Retweets 5,777 Likes

  • @[email protected]
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    81 year ago

    When I started DMing I bought a couple of packs on Ebay in order to have color coded dice for my players.

    Then when I started playing, I bought myself 2 sets of really nice metal dice from Etsy.

    Now I don’t have the urge to buy any more dice, because there just is no need.

    • I have no need for the sheer number of dice I have, but I have desire.

      I got my literal gem dice (as in machined form semiprecious stones) because they were gorgeous. The same applies to my dichroic prism dice. I have my metal sets because I just like the feel of them; the heft in the hand and the satisfying *thunk* as they hit the dice tray from out the dice tower. I have several sets of dice because the colours appealed to me. (I tend to give these out to new players as I introduce them.) I have speciality dice (FUDGE/Fate dice, various Chinese dice, etc.) for the times I need them. And in the end it winds up with me having way more dice than I strictly speaking need.

      But I regret none of them.

        • Piecemakers
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          21 year ago

          Not a worry, it was mostly said in jest 🤗🍻

        • Piecemakers
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          41 year ago

          "What is the singular form of dice?

          ‘Die’ is the singular form of ‘dice’. It comes from the French word des, a plural word for the same objects. In English, the most common way to make nouns plural is to add an ‘s’. If ‘die’ followed that rule precisely, its plural form would be ‘dies’, however, English is full of irregular plurals. Along with octopus, fish, goose, wolf, cactus, and appendix, “die” does not follow that rule implicitly. The plural form is ‘dice’. If you roll dice, you are rolling two or more game pieces. If you roll a die, you are only using one piece."

          It’s really as simple as: which sounds correct? “Rolling a die” or “rolling a dice”? 🤷🏼‍♂️ Anti-intellectualism is no one’s friend, friend.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              It’s dice and die. Both are correct depending on who you ask

              https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/dice

              In old-fashioned English, ‘dice’ was used only as a plural form, and the singular was die, but now ‘dice’ is used as both the singular and the plural form.

              https://en.m.wiktionary.org/wiki/dice

              The singular usage is considered incorrect by many authorities. However, it should be noted that The New Oxford Dictionary of English, Judy Pearsall, Patrick Hanks (1998) states that “In modern standard English, the singular die (rather than dice) is uncommon. Dice is used for both the singular and the plural.”