We love playing dice !
Here are some games to get you started :)
Threes! (a quick fun game perfect in a party setting , taught to me by the staff of Mission Chinese Food on Orchard St in 2014)
Start with 5 dice, Players have up to five rolls in each turn and wanna get as low of a score as possible, like golf.
All dice numbers have same value as its number rolled except three which is counted as zero.
Player's score for the round is total of all their dice.
At the end of the round player with lowest score wins the pot.
Farkle! (a longer , super fun game that seems complicated at first but is addictive once you get it, taught to us by artist Hayett McCarthy at our store in Hudson winter of 2018)
Start with 6 dice, a paper & pencil
One player is chosen to begin and play moves clockwise around the table. Each player in turn rolls all six dice and checks to see if they have rolled any scoring dice or combinations. (See Scoring below.) Any dice that score may be set aside and then the player may choose to roll all the remaining dice. The player must set aside at least one scoring die of their choice if possible but is not required to set aside all scoring dice.
For example, if a player rolled 1-2-2-5-5-6 on their turn, they could set aside the 1 and the two 5's for scoring, or they could choose to set aside only the 1. Any scoring dice that are not set aside may be rerolled along with the non-scoring dice.
If all six dice have been set aside for scoring (known as having a “hot hand”), the player must roll all six dice again and continue adding to their accumulated score or they can bank their points, end their turn, and pass the dice to the next player.
A player’s turn continues until either they decide to stop (at which point they then score their accumulated points) or until they fail to roll any scoring dice on a throw.
If a player scores no points on a roll, this is known as a Farkle. The player may continue to roll any dice that have not been previously set aside for scoring, but all of their points gained so far that turn are lost.
At the end of a player’s turn, any points they have scored are written down and the dice are passed to the next player.
SCORING:
1-100 points 5-50 points Three 1's 1,000 points Three 2's 200 points Three 3's 300 points Three 4's 400 points Three 5's 500 points Three 6's 600 points 1-2-3-4-5-6 (flush) 1000 points 3 Pairs (called a box car) 1000 points (including 4-of-a-kind and a pair)
Note that scoring combinations only count when made with a single throw. (Example: If a player rolls a 1 and sets it aside and then rolls two 1’s on their next throw, they only score 300 points, not 1000.)
Sometimes a single roll will provide multiple ways to score. For example, a player rolling 1-2-4-5-5-5 could score one of the following:
100 points for the 1
150 points for the 1 and a 5
500 points for the three 5's
600 points for the 1 and the three 5's
WINNING:
The first player to score a total of 10,000 or more points wins, provided that no other players with a remaining turn can exceed that score.