Common Dice Games

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Free dice games

Fun DIY Dice Games that help kids learn early maths skills like counting, counting on, number recognition and more.

We've been on the lookout for playful ways to help JJ with her early maths skills. (Regular Danya Banya readers might remember when we played outside with numbers and chalk, jumped for numbers on the trampoline, and when we made our photo and number puzzle – all working on numeral recognition).

Mr Banya came up with today's number game, so I can't take the credit, but I thought I would share it with you just the same. I've also included a huge list of awesome DIY dice games for young kids at the end of this post – lots of ideas to try!

How to make a DIY dice game for kids

Make two or more ‘number boards' with the numbers 2-12, and at least one set of corresponding 2-12 number pieces. You'll also need two regular dice. Watch att direct tv.

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  • Use of a 'D&D dice' set is common to most tabletop role playing games today. You might be wondering: Which 7 dice make a set? To start playing, you only need one of each: the D4, D6, D8, D10, D12, and D20, but standard 7-dice sets also include a second D10 which is used for percentile rolls.

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To make our number boards and number pieces, Mr Banya used a piece of thick white cardboard, a permanent marker and a ruler. He ruled out a grid, and drew the numbers 2-12 in four rows, cutting the first three horizontally to make three boards, and the last row into individual number pieces.

How to play

Number of players: 2 or more
Age: 4-6 year olds
You will need: a 2-12 number board per player; a set of 2-12 number pieces; 2 dice.
Playing time: 10 minutes
Object of the game: to collect the most number pieces by the end of the game.

The youngest player goes first. She rolls the dice and selects the number from the pieces in the centre. She places the number piece over the corresponding number on her board.

The next player then rolls the dice and selects a number as above. If the number rolled is no longer in the centre however, then she can take this number from another players board and place it on her own.

The play continues in a clockwise direction, with each player rolling and taking a number piece – either from the centre, or from another players board – until there are no more pieces left in the centre. The player who has the most number pieces on their board wins!

(Sometimes it can take a long time to roll the very last number, so you may wish to declare the game finished when there is only one piece left in the middle, especially if you have kids with short attention spans or who get frustrated easily. After all, it's supposed to be fun.)

And then you play again!

Variation: If you want to add to the number of players, make additional boards, and also an additional set of number pieces. While playing, if there are no more corresponding number pieces in the middle, players get to ‘choose' which player to take the corresponding number piece from.

This game might seem quite simple, and it is, but it still works on quite a few early maths skills.

Math principles in play

  • Counting – being able to recite 1-12 in the correct order
  • Numeral recognition – understanding that a numeral represents a number, and being able to recognise that numeral.
  • One-to-One Correspondence – count a group of dots or along a number line, and understanding that each dot or number is counted once.
  • Counting on – starting with a number and counting on from that
  • Subitising – recognising that a certain pattern of dots on a die represents a particular number, without having to count each dot
  • Addition – adding the two numbers on the dice

My daughter JJ, at 4 years and 9 months, found this fun, even though some of these math principles are tricky for her. You see, JJ is still learning to recognise the numerals 6, 7 and 9. (For some reason, these particular numerals get muddled up in her head.)

This game allowed her to practise her numeral recognition in a non-confronting way, work on a few different skills at the same time, and all whilst having fun.

To give you an example, if JJ rolls a 6 and a 3, she counts the dots on the dice to 9, but can't yet recognise the corresponding numeral 9 from the number pieces in the centre. So she will ‘count on' (starting from 2) using her board as a reference, until she reaches 9. She can then use the number on her board as a visual reference to figure out which number piece to take. Tricky!

Board Games Played With Dice

Subitising (estimating a quantity) is a great math skill for kindergarteners, and dice are perfect for learning to subitise to 6. When kids roll one die, they can learn to recognise how many dots there are by the pattern, without having to count individual dots. Or if they roll two dice, they can subitise to work out the first number, and then use that number as the starting point to ‘count on' from. Both help with speed, accuracy and confidence with board games and maths in general. JJ is still working all of this out – currently she can subitise to 4, but still counts dots if she rolls a 5 or a 6.


A great way to practise all of these skills, is through lots and lots of dice play! And, it's not only educational, it's also fun! I'm super keen to implement a regular games night in our house. It might sound daggy, but it's also a great way for families to connect, screen-free. Plus I may be super-competitive. (Just saying…) 🙂

I've been looking up some fun kindergarten dice games to play with JJ, and also some introductory toddler or preschool dice games so that we can include her 2.5 year old younger sister, Bee. I've found so many awesome ones, that I just had to share them with you. Happy rolling!

Fun dice games for young kids

  • Dice play can be as simple as counting out small manipulatives – change up the manipulative, and you have a whole new game. Ha! Buggy and Buggy has some great ideas, including making a simple die for beginners.
  • This roll and cover train dice game (with free printable) from Craftulate looks like a fun and easy introduction to dice. {Bonus points that it's about trains – one of Bee's favourite things!}
  • Plant by number! Inspire a budding florist with this simple spring dice game by Fun A Day.
  • Another fun spring toddler dice game: sing along to 'Mary, Mary, quite contrary. How does your garden grow?' and roll and build a flower, with this free printable flower download from Best Toys 4 Toddlers.
  • Or similarly this roll and build a snowman from Toddler Approved would be great for wintertime.
  • Combine dice with animal figurines to create some playful counting, addition and subtraction opportunities. Rainy Day Mum has a really cute count and add farm game, and another speckled frogs counting game for you to try.
  • I just adore this Apple Tree Addition Game from Mama Papa Bubba.
  • Simple Fun for Kids' turns a preschool fine motor activity into a playful maths game, just by incorporating a die. And doesn't it make for a pretty autumn window display? You could adapt to for the other seasons too.
  • Kitchen Floor Crafts' Sum, Say & Spray math game is the sort of game that we would play in our backyard. I love that it takes maths play outdoors in a fun way. I might just borrow this one for an easy 5 minute after school activity.
  • Make a simple Lego addition tray like this one from Mama Papa Bubba.
  • Roll the dice and construct a wall – Simple Fun for Kids uses foam cups for this activity, but you could use plastic or paper cups, or anything stackable really. Another low prep idea that is great to have up your sleeve when the kids start getting restless…
  • Simple board games are great for turn taking, counting and subitising too, like this cute DIY Family Rainbow Game from Rainy Day Mum.
  • Combining numeracy with literacy, Kitchen Floor Crafts has a fun addition and subtraction dice game based on the children's book Pete the Cat and his Four Groovy Buttons.
  • Or read Bugs are Insects, and use dice to design your own play dough ladybird like Life over C's did for Rainy Day Mum.
  • Have any plastic eggs left over from Easter? See who will win with this Racing Eggs game from Best Toys 4 Toddlers. (Love that it can be multi-player.)

The big question is, which one to play first. 🙂

Speaking of learning through play, you might also be interested in a new ebook called ABCs and 123s. It's a collaborative ebook with literacy, numeracy and geometry activities from over 40 like-minded kid bloggers, who all believe that kids learn best through play. It's a great resource for parents (grandparents, carers or teachers) who want to introduce letters, numbers and shapes to their kids in a fun, hands-on and playful way. There's over 40 tried and tested ideas, with materials lists, step-by-step instructions, and full colour photographs. You can read more about it, and see page examples here.

I also pin playful maths ideas that I love here:

xx Danya

Related Posts

What would the modern person do if television, the movies, Social Media, sports, and music events didn't exist? Chances are we might spend our time playing more board games just like the ancient Romans.

The ancient Romans loved board games.

Some of the more common board games played by ancient Romans were dice, knucklebones, marbles, and a form of checkers, chess, tic-tac-toe, and backgammon.

Let ‘em roll!

Dice (Tesserae) was a gambling game. Players rolled the dice and bet on the results. Roman dice were different from modern dice in that the numbers on any two opposite sides added up to seven. Like today, dice were shaken in a cup and tossed onto a table. People also placed bets. Paintings found on ancient Roman walls show that they played with three dice.

Tali is the Latin name for knucklebones, and the Greeks called them Astragaloi. ‘Like most Roman and Greek games, tali was first played in ancient Egypt,' and were discovered in ancient Egyptian tombs. The first pieces were made from the knucklebones of sheep and goats, but the Romans also made them from marble, wood, glass, precious metals and gems. When the tali are tossed ‘each fall on one of four sides' resembling the modern game of dice.

List Of Dice Games

The game of marbles called Nux ‘nuts' originates with the pagan Roman feast of Saturnalia (Winter Solstice), which was eventually replaced by Christmas in Christianized late ancient Rome. People would give each other bags filled with nuts and marbles. Children loved playing Nux and there are references by Roman writers to the game. One account speaks of how the emperor Romulus Augustus ‘played the game as a child.' The rules of the game have been lost, but some form of it might be seen in modern European games like ‘Ring Taw' and ‘Archboard' which requires a player to roll their marbles at a ‘bridge with nine Roman arches.' The arches are numbered with a Roman numeral from 1 (I) to 9 (IX) and whichever arch a marble rolls through, the player ‘scores the number of points shown at the top of the arch.' 45 is the total amount of points required to win. Marbles were most often made of clay, stone or glass.

Get on board—Squares, Grids, and Spaces.

The Romans played a form of checkers where the player had to get 5 stones in a row to win and games that involved moving ‘pebbles from one square to another in a grid.' Evidence of these grids has been found ‘scratched into floor stones and floor tiles all over the Roman Empire, in houses, and by guardhouses, and in amphitheaters, wherever men or women, boys or girls, had some time to waste.'

They also played a game called Latrunculi a Roman form of chess. It used a board made either of wood, marble, stone, or silver, and black and white army pieces that fight it out. There was also another game similar to chess called Pebbles because you could use anything as a piece. The goal was to advance square by square and surround your opponent's pieces with two of your own ‘either vertically or horizontally or diagonally.'

A game played in ancient Rome and close to tic-tac-toe is known as Rota meaning ‘wheel.' Rota boards could be easily ‘scratched or scribbled' anywhere where Romans went. It's a three-in-a-row game like tic-tac-toe but different in that it cannot end in a tie. Another game also similar to tic-tac-toe from the first century BC was called Terni Lapilli. This form used three playing pieces that had to be moved into empty spaces. ‘Grid markings have been found chalked all over Rome.'

Lastly, a board game that any class of Romans could play was called Lucky Sixes. In each column/row there were six figures that resembled numbers, letters, or even pictures. When put together, they formed a philosophical phrase or joke. Windows media player 10 mac free download. Lucky Sixes resembles the modern game of Backgammon because players started at the opposite side of the board and threw dice or sticks ‘to move pieces to their opponent's side.'

A world without games is no fun at all!

Common Dice Games Rules

Even in the ancient world, and not just the Roman Empire, man enjoyed sporting pastimes and games. Playing games was most likely a pleasant escape from the job of daily survival. On a hot sunny day under a merchant's awning or in an icy-cold barracks, a game of marbles or dice must have added to life, and especially if there was money to be won. Bingo!

Common Dice Games Download

Pete Di Primo, Ancient Rome; K.E. Carr, ‘Roman Dice Games, Quatr.com; ‘The Origin of the Game of Marbles' magwv.com; Boardgames.lovetoknow.com; Mental floss.com;Praetorian.com; Tic-Tac-Toe Wikipedia.com





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