Fair Dice
A die (plural "dice") is any solid object with markings on each face that can be used to create a random number. Very useful when playing games of chance!
Fair Dice
In mathematics we say "fair dice" when we mean that there's an equally likely chance of landing on any face.
Most people think of these little cubes
when we say "dice" ...
... but all of the Platonic Solids can make fair dice!

Because of their perfect symmetry, every face is equally likely to land face-up.
So, using the Platonic Solids we can have dice with 4, 6, 8, 12 or 20 faces!
But with some imagination we can actually make fair dice with any number of faces we want.

How about these interesting dice?

Or this 10-sided one.

Or this 20-sided Roman die that's 1,800 years old.
So long as there's an equally likely chance of landing on any face then they are fair dice.
Professional Dice

For very fair dice there are casino-grade dice with special qualities:
- partly transparent so you can see any bubbles or weights inside
- as close as possible to exact cubes
- sharp edges and corners
- dots filled with flush epoxy, so every face has the exact same weight and density
Try The Spinner !
The "d" Notation
Gamers and mathematicians use a short way to name these dice: the letter d followed by the number of faces.
= 4 faces
= 6 faces
= 8 faces
= 10 faces
= 12 faces
= 20 faces
So, a standard cube is a d6, and that 1,800-year-old Roman die is a d20.