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Since Power Yahtzee was developed with the addition of a sixth die, it is also possible to play standard Yahtzee with a Power Yahtzee set by setting the Power die aside. Bonus chips and standard Yahtzee scoresheets are not included in a Power Yahtzee set, however; so, as a suggestion, one has to buy (or print) standard Yahtzee scoresheets and ...
"Open Yahtzee" is a cross-platform open-source (free) version of Yahtzee for one player. [14] "YachtC" is a commercially available free app on the Google Play Store. It has three variations: The traditional version, a "7-sided" dice version called "Lucky7", and a "TriColor" version similar to Kismet. [15]
Yahtzee Free for All, [19] designed by Richard Borg in 2008, is a variant that uses a free-for-all format for two to six players. The components come in a hexagonal box made to look like a 3D image of a die. The inner box stores the components, while the outer box, when unfolded, doubles as the playing mat.
Yahtzee rules and scoring categories are somewhat different from Yatzy: [1] The bonus for reaching 63 or more points in the Upper Section is 35 points. Yahtzee does not have the One Pair and Two Pairs categories. The Three of a Kind and Four of a Kind categories are scored using the total of all the dice.
Cacho Alalay is played with five dice and a cup. Cacho Alalay is a popular dice game from Latin America.It is similar to Yahtzee/Yatzy.The purpose of the game is to roll five dice and score points from their combinations.
Crag is played with three six-sided dice. Crag is a dice game similar to Yacht, Yahtzee, and Yatzy.It is played with three dice. [1] The game is quicker to play than Yahtzee, [2] and in Clement Wood and Gloria Goddard's 1940 Complete Book of Games, it is described as a game that "shares with Yacht the supremacy among sequence dice-casting games".
The faces of the dice used in Kismet, with three different colors of pips. Kismet is a commercial dice game introduced in 1964. The game's name is the Turkish word for "fate". E.
Liar's dice is a class of dice games for two or more players requiring the ability to deceive and to detect an opponent's deception. In "single hand" liar's dice games, each player has a set of dice, all players roll once, and the bids relate to the dice each player can see (their hand) plus all the concealed dice (the other players' hands).