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<blockquote data-quote="Father of Dragons" data-source="post: 3559099" data-attributes="member: 52294"><p>Here's a type of die I've been wondering about for years. They are plain white plastic six-sided dice with rounded corners, about 0.6" along one side. One three sides is a san-serif X (or perhaps a multiplication sign). On the other three sides is a san-serif I (or perhaps a subtraction sign or a dash). All three I's are oriented the same, the three X's form a strip, as do the three I's (and thus one X is across from another X, one I is across from another I, and the remaining I and X are across from each other). The X's and I's are inscribed/cast into the surface, and are marked with black ink.</p><p></p><p>I picked these dice up from the misc. dice bin at a Game Keeper about 8 or so years ago. They sort of look like math dice of some sort, but there were no other dice that matched them in the bin, and no other dice that looked like they might be used for math games. No one at the store had the slightest idea what the dice were for originally (they had already been in the misc. bin when they had started working there). We used them instead of a coin for coin flips in the Pokemon TCG (hey, that's what my kids were into then).</p><p></p><p>Anyway, and idea what purpose these might have intended for?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Father of Dragons, post: 3559099, member: 52294"] Here's a type of die I've been wondering about for years. They are plain white plastic six-sided dice with rounded corners, about 0.6" along one side. One three sides is a san-serif X (or perhaps a multiplication sign). On the other three sides is a san-serif I (or perhaps a subtraction sign or a dash). All three I's are oriented the same, the three X's form a strip, as do the three I's (and thus one X is across from another X, one I is across from another I, and the remaining I and X are across from each other). The X's and I's are inscribed/cast into the surface, and are marked with black ink. I picked these dice up from the misc. dice bin at a Game Keeper about 8 or so years ago. They sort of look like math dice of some sort, but there were no other dice that matched them in the bin, and no other dice that looked like they might be used for math games. No one at the store had the slightest idea what the dice were for originally (they had already been in the misc. bin when they had started working there). We used them instead of a coin for coin flips in the Pokemon TCG (hey, that's what my kids were into then). Anyway, and idea what purpose these might have intended for? [/QUOTE]
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