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Dice Roller

Roll a virtual die online for board games, Dungeons and Dragons, and classroom math.

2 diced6
Tap roll for a truly random result.
Dice
2

Teams & Points

Group play with a score
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About the Dice Roller

Lost the dice again? This dice roller gives you a fair, six-sided die anywhere you have a browser, one tap rolls real 3D dice that tumble and settle on numbers from 1 to 6. No cup to shake, no die skittering off the table, and nothing to hunt for when it rolls under the fridge.

It's built for the moments a physical die goes missing: family game night, a Dungeons & Dragons session where someone forgot their set, or a math lesson where every student needs a roll of their own. Because each result is drawn independently, every roll is genuinely random, the dice have no memory of your last roll and no lean toward any face.

Keep it open in a tab and it's ready whenever play stalls. Roll to settle who goes first, generate practice problems, or add a little chance to any decision that could use a nudge from a die instead of a debate.

How to use the dice roller

  1. Choose how many dice to roll, use the plus and minus controls to set anywhere from 1 to 6 dice.
  2. Tap Roll the Dice and watch the 3D dice tumble and settle on their numbers.
  3. Read the faces once the dice settle, the total is added up for you below them.
  4. Announce it or apply it: move that many spaces, add it to your math problem, or use it to break a tie.
  5. Roll again for the next player or the next turn, each roll is independent of the last.
  6. Need two dice for Monopoly or Catan? Set the counter to 2 and the total is added up for you under the dice.

Ways to use the Dice Roller

Board game night rescue

When the dice have vanished into the couch cushions, keep the game moving with a virtual die that lands on 1 to 6 just like the real thing.

D&D and tabletop RPGs

Cover a forgotten dice bag or a quick d6 check for damage, initiative, or a simple ability roll without pausing the session.

Classroom math practice

Generate random numbers for addition drills, probability lessons, or number games so every student gets a fresh problem to solve.

Deciding who goes first

Have each player roll once, highest number starts. It's faster and fairer than arguing over who went first last time.

Party and icebreaker games

Assign numbered questions, dares, or teams, then roll to pick which one comes up next and keep the energy moving.

Chore and turn rotation

Number the tasks or the people, roll the die, and let chance settle who unloads the dishwasher tonight.

Tips for better spins

  • Roll twice and add the results to simulate a standard two-dice throw for games like Monopoly or Backgammon (totals of 2 to 12).
  • For a coin-flip feel, treat 1–3 as heads and 4–6 as tails when you only need a yes or no.
  • In the classroom, project the roller on the board so the whole class sees the same fair result at once.
  • Set a house rule before you start (like 're-roll ties') so everyone agrees on how the number is used.
  • Keep the tab pinned during game night so you can roll again instantly without reloading the page.

Next spins

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Good answers

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this dice roller actually random?

Yes. Each roll uses your device's cryptographic random generator, so every face from 1 to 6 has an equal chance and the dice carry no memory of previous rolls. There's no pattern to predict and no bias toward any number.

Can I roll two dice at once?

Yes, use the dice counter to roll up to six d6 at once. The roller shows every face and adds up the total for you, so two dice give you 2 to 12 instantly.

Do I need to download an app or sign up?

No. The dice roller runs right in your browser with nothing to install and no account to create. Open the page and tap to roll.

Can I use it for Dungeons & Dragons?

Absolutely, it works as a d6 for damage, checks, or any roll that uses a six-sided die, and you can roll up to six d6 at once. For other face counts (like a d20), set up our number wheel with that range.

Is it good for teaching probability in class?

It's well suited for it. Students can roll repeatedly and tally the outcomes to see how results even out toward equal frequencies over many rolls, a hands-on way to explore chance.

Does it work on phones and tablets?

Yes. The roller is designed to work on any screen size, so you can roll from a phone, tablet, or laptop wherever the game or lesson is happening.

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