This one surely isn’t gonna be a speed cube of any sort, not only is it tiny but it’s also very tight and rather tough. Which is actually convenient if it’s also meant to double as a usable die to be rolled on a table.

This time I changed the dots around to conform to the US Casino official dice dot pattern. Not much changed except which side 3 and 4 are on, plus the slant direction on 2 and 3.

My choice of starting point was White=1, Blue=2, and let everything else fall into place based on official standards.

White=1, Blue=2, Orange=3, Red=4, Green=5, Yellow=6

The slight change in the dots doesn’t really change previous dot patterns I’ve already found with my previous prototype, except the 5/5/5 pattern swaps one of the 5 sides, but the same set of moves still yields the 5/5/5 pattern.

  • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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    14 days ago

    Here’s a reference for the initial left handed die-cube I made. After toying around with both left and right handed variations, I actually prefer the left handed variation. It seems to give better coordinated color/dot patterns across red/green/white (Christmas colors) and also across red/white/blue (many national flags)…

    https://lemmy.world/post/21009190

    Of course, being a left handed die, it doesn’t comply with US casino standards, but I’m pretty sure they’re not gonna let you roll one of these at the craps table anyways. It is still a proper die though.