There’s just something attractive about rolling dice. They’re chunky, they make cool sounds, and it feels good when you roll something great. Some people, regardless of whether they use them for actual gaming, enjoy buyingD&D dice setsjust for the joy of collecting them. However, the use of dice in board games isn’t always a knock out of the park. Yes, there are plenty of games out there that underutilize dice, or rather, just don’t use them well at all.
That’s not to say the use of dice in games, at large, is usually a bad thing, but there’s a correlation to the amount of luck from dice there is in a game and how dissatisfying it can be if the game trudges on for too long. In other words, the longer a game is, the less it should rely on dice for how much impact randomness can weigh on a player’s strategy. That’s why we’ve assembled this list of the best dice rolling games to help you discover the best value for your money when selecting games that heavily feature dice. Let’s begin!

Updated on June 12, 2025, by Vaspaan Dastoor:Dice are the fundamental tools of many tabletop games, whether it’s to decide how many spaces to move, or how much damage you inflict upon an enemy. With that in mind there are a countless number of games that use dice, and we’ve added a few more to this list.
The Best Dice Rolling Games
Stone Age
Stone Age is approachable and satisfying for what it is, and its use of dice is elegant.
Stone Age takes a step back to simpler times when humanity’s greatest concerns were hunting for food and building primitive structures. It blends worker placement with dice rolling in a familiar way that just makes sense.

A charming take on paleolithic civilization-building, Stone Age combines the lovable qualities ofworker placement gamesand mixes them with dice rolling. Stone Age is a great game to transition to if you’re used to games likeMonopolyor Yahtzee. It takes the familiar use of regular six-sided dice and has players roll as many dice as the amount of workers they assign to different areas of the board. More than any other game on this list, you will encounter less than productive turns when the dice don’t roll your way, but there are features of the game that allow you to mitigate that luck.
Cthulhu: Death May Die
A robust system that strips out the minutiae of long, hefty rulebooks.
Cthulhu: Death May Die throws players straight into the action against a Great Old One terrorizing the world. Steer your unlikely investigator into the fray as you fight of insanity.

Cthulhu: Death May Die pays less emphasis on traditional Lovecraftian mystery-solving and more on hacking and slashing through broods of monsters by chucking dice. In this game, your investigator begins moderately insane, with a unique quirk that sets them apart from others at the table. Where other games set in this genre presume that you, the meager human investigator who couldn’t fathom inflicting even a scratch on one of these godlike beings, Cthluhu: Death May Die gives you a gun and says, “Go kill Cthulhu.” And guess what? You actually can.
The key hook here is theease of getting into the game.Cthulhu: Death May Die has a very innovative plug-and-play module system where you can pair a scenario with a different Old One that you will face.

King of Tokyo
A familiar dice mechanism adapted to beat-em-up monster battling.
Ever wondered what Yahtzee would be like with Kaiju? You’ll find out in King of Tokyo.
Back to talking about Yahtzee, King of Tokyo is an evolution of Yahtzee as if you gave it steroids and a feral instinct. That’s right, King of Tokyo has players assuming the role of Japanese Kaiju, raining havoc over the city of Tokyo. The trick is that each monster wants to be the sole victor in demolishing the city, and they’ll stop at nothing to achieve such a title, even if it means destroying their competition.

King of Tokyo gives you plenty of options on your turn with the dice that you roll. It forces you to decide if you want to be more economical on your turn to acquire points (one of the victory conditions), or if you just want to beat the other monsters at the table to be the last one standing (the other victory condition). It’s a quick, energetic contest that gamers young and old can enjoy.
Project: Elite
A cooperative real-time dice-rolling sci-fi action game with tense sequences and thrilling combat.
Project Elite takes the energy of a first-person shooter game and puts players in a race against time as you frantically roll dice to quash waves of aliens storming a marine base.

Take the energy we just described for King of Tokyo and crank it up to eleven. That’s Project Elite. This game pays no homage to cutesiness or self-aware references. No, it’s a brutal and gritty shooting gallery that has players cooperating with each other to mow through waves of hostile aliens.
What makes Project Elite intense is thatthere are no turns.Everyone rolls dice simultaneously, and as fast as humanly possible to acquire the right symbols they need from their dice to carry out actions on the board, such as moving around, interacting with features on the board, and, most importantly, gunning down aliens. It’s a vibrant experience and definitely worth trying.

Arcadia Quest
A lightweight alternative to heftier tabletop RPG’s in a box.
Arcadia Quest somehow does it all. It’s a dungeon crawler with dice, has whimsical art, is an RPG-like character building (to an extent), has elements of PvP and PvE, and presents the whole experience in about an hour.
Arcadia Quest is chaotic and somehow quaint at the same time. Players will assemble a small guild of three heroes who will spring into an arena to fight other guilds and defeat monsters controlled by the game. The game features delightful chibi-style miniatures, and is a treat to play or even just to watch. But why is the dice rolling component of the game special? It’s because of a little mechanism coined “exploding dice.” Put simply, you’ll use dice in Arcadia Quest to attack other players and monsters, and you’ll also use them to defend against attacks.

Every die has a few symbols you’ll look for to inflict and prevent damage, but there’s also a special “burst” symbol that lets you count it as a success you need, plus you’re able to re-roll the die again in hopes of yet another symbol. You can probably see where this is going. The game sets you up, so you can potentially keep rolling your dice over and over again if you keep rolling burst symbols, and when that happens (even if it’s rare), it’s a spectacular thing to behold.
Star Wars: Imperial Assault
If you like Star Wars, beautiful miniatures, and dice combat, you should check this one out.
Star Wars: Imperial Assault is an evolution of many titles before it, and it all culminates together into a refined system that leverages custom dice like no other game.

Star Wars: Imperial Assault hits the mark in so many ways, but it deserves to be on this list for its ability to condense a lot of substance into a few different dice. If you love Star Wars, you’ll naturally be positioned to enjoy Imperial Assault, but what’s beyond the theme is a clever use of customized dice and the iconic “surge” mechanism seen in prior titles like Descent: Journeys in the Dark by the same publisher, Fantasy Flight Games.
Players in Imperial Assault will control the insurgent rebels while one player takes on the role of the empire’s forces. Players will guide characters around the board trying to accomplish specific objectives, and as you might imagine, combat will inevitably ensue. Where the dice come in is for fighting, and on those dice are surge symbols, which, when rolled, trigger different abilities based on which character rolled them. It’s an incredibly streamlined and simple solution for packing huge levels of variability through dice resolution in just a handful of dice. It’s a huge component of what makes Imperial Assault a modern classic.
The Castles Of Burgundy
A groundbreaking way of using D6 for action selection.
The Castles of Burgundy is unassuming on the outside, but what lies within is the best application of regular six-sided dice board gaming media has yet seen.
The Castles of Burgundy might not look like much at first blush, but what’s inside is a promising experience of medieval city building via dice. The premise is simple. You’re given a blank canvas of a duchy in which you’ll need to construct buildings. You get said buildings by claiming them out of a central pool of available blueprints available to all players. The catch is that you have only two dice to claim blueprints with, and you may only claim blueprints for buildings that match the dice values you’ve rolled.
After you get those plans, you can then construct them in your duchy, but following the same logic, you have to place them in spots on your board that match a die value you currently have available to spend. It might seem like a nebulous concept at first, and it’s because it is. But after getting through your first round, what lies beyond is a sleek and clever game system that offers crunchy decisions and quick turns.
Marvel Dice Masters: Avengers vs. X-Men
When the dice are more than a tool
It’s one thing to use dice to decide your next move, but Marvel Dice Masters: Avengers vs. X-Men uses the dice themselves as part of the gameplay. Marvel characters from each of the two superhero teams are represented with custom dice, each dictating the specific hero’s actions.
Dice are usually used to represent character movements and actions, but Marvel Dice Masters: Avengers vs. X-Men uses the dice as the characters themselves. With each dice being themed on a particular hero, it’s an interesting take on how dice are usually used in tabletop games.
Risk
Risk of roll.
Risk is an all-time classic, due to the strategic planning involved and the hair-raising encounters when your armies face off. Risk uses a dice-throwing face off whenever two armies clash, leaving it up to the luck of the roll to see whose army comes out victorious.
Risk is a board game that everyone and their grandmother has played, literally. While strategic planning is the meat of the game, encounters between two armies come down to a dice-rolling face off. This kind of face off is pretty heartbreaking, as you can go from winning to losing in a batter of a few throws.
FAQ
What is a dice rolling game?
A dice rolling game is any game that heavily emphasizes the use of rolling dice to determine actions and outcomes for players at each turn of the game. While many different games incorporate dice, they may not all deserve to be categorized as a solely a “dice rolling game.” They could emphasize other mechanisms more strongly than dice, in which case they should be categorized as something else.
What is the oldest dice rolling game?
Although it didn’t use traditional dice in the way most of us are used to, the Egyptian game of senet, which has been around since before 3000 BCE, bore the use of two-sided throwing sticks to generate random outcomes, effectively simulating dice.