Worlds of Design: Too Much Dice?

Game designers: You don’t need bucketsful of dice in your RPG rules!

Game designers: You don't need bucketsful of dice in your RPG rules!

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Picture courtesy of Pixabay.
Please Note: I'm not against dice themselves. I’m not saying that using dice is bad in game design. It depends on what you want to achieve. If you want a game rather than a puzzle, some kind of chance or uncertainty is required, and dice is a common way of introducing that. What I'm saying is you should not need huge numbers of dice.

The User Interface​

Dice are part of the user interface (UI). The UI is very important in video games, but it exists in tabletop games as well. (While video games might not overtly use dice, many use randomizers that are equivalent to dice.) The difference may be that there are usually more than one person involved in a tabletop game so mistakes will be more noticeable, and that tabletop interfaces have settled into many familiar techniques because of long use.

It Started with a Single Die​

When RPGs originated, we already had the example of the many Avalon Hill wargames that used a single D6 and a lookup table to resolve combat. We don’t know who originally used a 20-sided die to resolve situations in games, but it certainly had the effect of avoiding the use of several dice, and did not require use of lookup tables any more than several dice do.

There is an outstanding virtue of using more than one die: you get a “normal” or Gaussian curve of the sum rather than a linear result. That is, the results in the middle are more common than the results at the “edges”—with two dice a sum of 7 is six times as likely as a 2, twice as likely as a 10. Yet with the D20 linear result you have enough distinct choices that you may not need a Gaussian curve, and in many cases you don’t want a non-linear Gaussian result in your resolution.

For example, if you need a 10 to hit, and you roll a D20, you have a 55% chance of success. If you roll 2D6 and sum, you have 1 chance in 6 (16.66%) to hit. With the sum of 3D6 the result would be different again (the average roll there is 10.5).

Some Examples​

The best-known examples of “bucketfuls of dice” in tabletop role-playing games are Shadowrun, Champions, and GURPS, but there are many others. Some of these systems count successes instead of adding up results. Combat also involves a lot of dice checks, which might make more sense in modern setting where guns are involved and results are more likely to be lethal. Over time, these systems have been refined to be easier to use, but some designers are still including massive die rolls in their games.

Several years ago I watched an atmospheric post-apocalyptic RPG session. The campaign setting supplement that I read for a couple hours during one session contained virtually no rules references; they were descriptions of places, people, technology, etc. It was a setting that cried out for a simple set of rules so that players could savor it. The game rules, at least as the people I watched play them, were quite complex and required large numbers of 10-sided dice. Any activity check required a player to roll several D10s and add the sum.

When there was any combat (there was a lot) it was worse. In some cases there was a to-hit roll, then an avoidance roll, then a determination of hit location, then armor absorption of damage and recording how much had been absorbed by the armor at the particular place. This often required someone to roll a lot of D10s.

Why This is a Problem​

Large pools of dice create a complex set of mechanics, which has unintended consequences that end up burdening the players.
  • Adding Isn’t Easy. Adding sums quickly is easier for experienced players who are practiced in making quick calculations on their heads, but it may not be as easy for new or younger gamers. They have to think about the result, instead of just seeing it.
  • Legibility. Different dice have varying levels of legibility. It’s not as easy to read a D10 as a D6, and that issue is compounded the more dice the game uses.
  • You Need a Lot of Dice. Rolling a lot of dice also makes for more problems than rolling just one, such as dice falling off the table, and a shortage of dice (especially D10!). In the above example, players ended up passing D10s back and forth because only one of them had enough. This all wastes time while no one is having fun.
In the next article we’ll explore how dice shapes a game’s play.

Your turn: What RPGs minimize or even eliminate dice rolls?
 

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Lewis Pulsipher

Lewis Pulsipher

Dragon, White Dwarf, Fiend Folio

Lord_Blacksteel

Adventurer
GURPS and Champions cited as using "bucketfuls" of dice? For damage maybe but their normal task resolution is 3d6 roll under - precisely because it gives that bell curve.

Also:
"adding isn't easy" - come on, is this a serious issue in actual games? Addition? Really?

"Legibility" - this is a problem with the dice you chose, not with the game design.

"You need a lot of dice" - seriously, are dice hard to come by these days? Are they bulky, heavy, or difficult to transport? In my experience most players bring their own dice anyway so it's not a shared table resource anyway.

A strange take from a longtime industry veteran.
 

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Eyes of Nine

Everything's Fine
Didn't Hero system use a ton of dice? I also was surprised at seeing GURPS listed in the "lots of dice" camp

Anyway, as soon as I saw the headline, I was like "Hellooooo Shadowrun!"

It does seem though that a lot of games are moving towards the "dice pool" mechanic, where instead of getting a plus or minus to your die-roll, you instead add or remove a die. Specifically I'm thinking of the Forged in the Dark and the Year Zero Engine families of games.
 

MGibster

Legend
I have to agree that the three dice used for GURPS doesn't seem like a bucket full. But I think the article does miss something important, proprietary dice. FFG's Star Wars, FUDGE, Modiphius' Fallout, Legend of the Five Rings (FFG again), and I'm sure there are others. I'm in a Fallout campaign and bought one set of dice, but another player ended up buying two other sets of their dice just so we had enough for everyone.
 


GMMichael

Guide of Modos
Your turn: What RPGs minimize or even eliminate dice rolls?
My game does both. Instead of rolling more dice, you roll a larger die, and the d12 is king (or queen, as the case may be...).

Also, if you're happy with half the highest roll, you can skip rolling and use that instead.

GURPS and Champions cited as using "bucketfuls" of dice? For damage maybe but their normal task resolution is 3d6 roll under - precisely because it gives that bell curve.

Also:
"adding isn't easy" - come on, is this a serious issue in actual games? Addition? Really?
I'd rather be miming my combat maneuver than totalling dice, or removing botches, or...

"Legibility" - this is a problem with the dice you chose, not with the game design.
I guess you don't use d4s. Or d100s.
 
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MGibster

Legend
Your turn: What RPGs minimize or even eliminate dice rolls?
Vampire 5th edition's stance is that dice shouldn't be rolled if failure or success won't add anything interesting to the story. Do you really need a player to make a roll to flirt their way into the club? Probably not, just say they're successful and move along.
 

Dire Bare

Legend
GURPS and Champions cited as using "bucketfuls" of dice? For damage maybe but their normal task resolution is 3d6 roll under - precisely because it gives that bell curve.
If you have to use bucketfuls of dice for damage in those games, then yes, bucketfuls of dice is an issue.

Also:
"adding isn't easy" - come on, is this a serious issue in actual games? Addition? Really?
Yes. Some of us struggle to add visually quickly and easily. I'm a fairly bright dude who's good at math, and I struggle to do so.

"Legibility" - this is a problem with the dice you chose, not with the game design.
You didn't read the OP close enough. Certainly, some dice, by manufacture, are easier to read than others. But OP talks about different types of dice, like a d20 vs a d6, where it can be more difficult to read them easily. And he's correct.

"You need a lot of dice" - seriously, are dice hard to come by these days? Are they bulky, heavy, or difficult to transport? In my experience most players bring their own dice anyway so it's not a shared table resource anyway.
A decent dice set can run you about $15. Not too bad. But if you need multiple dice sets, yes, that can get expensive. If you needs tons of dice, yes, they can become a pain to take with you. And if you don't have an LGS, yes, they can be more difficult to come by . . . although Amazon will always be happy to sell you bags of dice.

But that isn't the thrust of the OP. The point is that games that use bucketfuls of dice are slower and more cumbersome than games that don't. It's the main reason why I don't play Shadowrun, even though I LOVE the setting. I HATE the bucketfuls of dice needed to play that game . . . and I know I am far from the only one with that opinion.

A strange take from a longtime industry veteran.
No, not really strange at all. Different from your own opinion, perhaps, but not strange and an opinion shared by others.
 

Dire Bare

Legend
I have to agree that the three dice used for GURPS doesn't seem like a bucket full. But I think the article does miss something important, proprietary dice. FFG's Star Wars, FUDGE, Modiphius' Fallout, Legend of the Five Rings (FFG again), and I'm sure there are others. I'm in a Fallout campaign and bought one set of dice, but another player ended up buying two other sets of their dice just so we had enough for everyone.
The article doesn't "miss" talking about proprietary dice, it just not what the article is about. At least not Part 1. Perhaps OP will get to those special dice later.

In games that I've played where the game was well designed and the theme was one I was excited about . . . proprietary dice ADDED to the experience for me. In games where the design was clunky, or the theme was not to my liking . . . the special dice seemed like a pain in the rear and I struggled to make sense of the various symbols.

I haven't played FFG's Star Wars game yet, so have no direct experience with that set of dice . . . but from what I've read and from folks I've talked to, it's the same thing. If an individual loves Star Wars and groks the game system, they tend to LOVE the dice. If they are merely okay with Star Wars and aren't fans of the game system, they are less fond of the dice. I'm certainly curious to give the game and dice a shot, but . . . . no legal digital ebooks and my gaming pals are not interested in the game.
 



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