Roll the dice - virtual dice roller.

Conventional Dice

Conventional dice are small, typically cube-shaped objects with six faces, each marked with a distinct number of pips or engraved numerals from one through six. Made from materials like plastic, wood, or metal, they’re designed so that each face is identical in shape and weight, ensuring no side is inherently favored. Their uniform geometry allows for an equal probability of landing on any face when rolled, making them simple yet elegant tools for introducing randomness into games, experiments, and decision-making.

When you roll a die—whether by flicking it across a table, shaking it in a cup, or dropping it onto a surface—you convert potential energy into motion and let gravity, friction, and impact forces determine the outcome. The result is a close approximation of a fair random event, with each face having a one-in-six chance. Dice are the cornerstone of countless board games (like Monopoly and Yahtzee), role-playing adventures (rolling multiple d6’s in Dungeons & Dragons), and probability demonstrations in classrooms. To maintain fairness, it’s best to roll on a flat, level surface and avoid worn or chipped dice, which can introduce subtle biases into long sequences of rolls.


Unconventional Dice

This virtual dice roller lets you simulate dice with any nonconventional number of faces—far beyond the standard six-sided variety. While physical dice most commonly come in 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, or 20 faces (with six-sided dice being the most prevalent), this tool allows you to specify any face count and roll as many dice as you like, producing truly random results based on your selections.