A new study claims Native Americans have been using dice to gamble and explore probability for more than 12,000 years.
You can compare throwing one of these ancient dice to a coin toss – although this discovery also underscores that dice are much older than coins.
They’re not the six-sided dice we’re familiar with now, but these ancient tools were crucial for rudimentary games of chance 12,000 years ago.
Former project designer-turned-dice maker Bob Spircoff took home $10,000, the largest of three “Project Pitch It” prizes, for ...
Native Americans had dice and games of probability 12,000 years ago, according to a new study. That’s far earlier than the ...
The hit tabletop franchise Dice Throne is making the jump to video games with Dice Throne Digital, and its recent Kickstarter ...
New research identifies more than 600 objects discovered in the United States as two-sided dice crafted by Native Americans.
"What makes dice fair?" is a more loaded question than you might think. At its simplest, a fair die means that each of the faces has the same probability of landing facing up. A standard six-sided die ...
In Roman times, dice were visibly lopsided and were unbalanced in the arrangement of numbers By 1450, dice players and makers seemingly figured out that form affected function when it came to rolling ...
Don't miss the Kickstarter Trailer for Dice Throne Digital, the hit adaptation of the card-game battler board game developed ...