Dice Roller
Lost the dice? Roll d4 to d20 β up to ten at a time, totals included.
How to use the dice roller
- Pick a die type: d6 is the standard board-game cube; d20 and friends are for tabletop RPGs.
- Choose how many dice to roll (1β10), then hit Roll.
- Each die shows its own result, with the total underneath.
Which dice do games actually use?
Classic board games β Monopoly, Backgammon, Catan, Yahtzee β run on the six-sided d6, usually one or two at a time. Tabletop role-playing games popularized the full polyhedral family: the d20 decides most actions in Dungeons & Dragons, the d4βd12 handle damage and effects, and percentile rolls pair two d10s. A virtual roller has two quiet advantages over the real thing: dice can't roll off the table, and nobody can argue the die was "loaded." Need a simpler decision? A coin flip or a yes/no wheel settles two-option questions faster.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the dice roller truly random?
Yes β every roll uses your browserβs random number generator, so each face has an exactly equal chance. Unlike physical dice, there are no manufacturing imbalances or worn edges to bias the result.
Can I roll D&D dice like a d20?
Yes. Choose d4, d6, d8, d10, d12, or d20 β the full set used in Dungeons & Dragons and most tabletop RPGs β and roll up to 10 dice at once with an automatic total.
How do I roll multiple dice at once?
Set the number of dice (1β10) and click Roll. Each die is rolled independently and the results are shown individually along with the sum.
Can I use this for board games if I lost the dice?
That is exactly what it is for. Two d6 covers Monopoly, Catan and most classics; the total is displayed so nobody has to do maths after a long game night.