Showing posts with label dice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dice. Show all posts

2017-01-20

Crabjack-21 - An update to the polyhedral dice gambling game

Crabjack-21 is a dice-based gambling game that uses a single set of d20/d12/d10/d8/d6/d4 dice, so it can make a nice fit for an RPG setting using something the players have on hand.  It's based of off Crabjack, but adds the d20 and has the payouts balanced to account for the extra die and higher total.

Crabjack-21 is played by a single player against the house, although any onlookers might make side-bets with each other about the outcome of any next roll.  The player makes their initial bet (within the house limits).  From now on the player is going to pick a die and roll it, adding it to their running total.  Each die can only be rolled once.  Depending on the total they are at, they will either win a payout (ending the game), bust out (ending the game), or have to keep rolling.

Getting an exact total (of all dice rolled so far) of 7 or 11 or 21 wins a payout.  The player busts out if they go over 21, having a total of 22 or higher.  If the player manages to roll all six dice without busting out, they win regardless of their total.  Some versions of the game (you can pick which version you like, or have multiple versions in your world representing local variants of the game) have special rule if you roll a 1 on the first roll:  It can immediately end the game (with or without a payout).

Here are a couple versions of the game, these all have a base payout of the bet plus half, and then a bigger payout for the 6-dice win:

(1st roll): Keep rolling
7 or 11 or 21 (1st to 5th roll): 1.5x
21 or under (6th roll): 2x

(1st roll): End game, lose bet
7 or 11 or 21 (1st to 5th roll): 1.5x
21 or under (6th roll): 6x

(1st roll): End game, but get half bet back
7 or 11 or 21 (1st to 5th roll): 1.5x
21 or under (6th roll): 5x

Outside of a casino-like environment, gamblers can take turns being the house.  They should agree on each taking the same bet and number of turns being player and house.  If played this way, you can can tweak the payouts to whatever you want, e.g. 2x on 7/11/21 and 10x on a 6-dice win.  Those higher payout numbers would make being the house all the time a losing proposition (with perfect play), but it doesn't matter if both sides take turns playing the same way.

2017-01-18

Crabjack - A polyhedral dice gambling game

Crabjack is a dice-based gambling game that uses a single set of d12/d10/d8/d6/d4 dice, so it can make a nice fit for an RPG setting using something the players have on hand.

Crabjack is played by a single player against the house, although any onlookers might make side-bets with each other about the outcome of any next roll.  The player makes their initial bet (within the house limits).  From now on the player is going to pick a die and roll it, adding it to their running total.  Each die can only be rolled once.  Depending on the total they are at, they will either win a payout (ending the game), bust out (ending the game), or have to keep rolling.

Getting an exact total (of all dice rolled so far) of 7 or 11 wins a payout.  The player busts out if they go over 11, having a total of 12 or higher.  If the player manages to roll all five dice without busting out, they win regardless of their total.  Some versions of the game (you can pick which version you like, or have multiple versions in your world representing local variants of the game) have special rule if you roll a 1 on the first roll:  It can immediately end the game (with or without a payout).

With that framework, there's a lot of possible payouts you can use to get a respectable game -- one that has close to even odds that still slightly favour the house with optimal play.

Here are a couple versions of the game, these all have a base payout of the bet plus half, and then a bigger payout for the 5-dice win:

1 (1st roll): Keep rolling
7 or 11 (1st to 4th roll): 1.5x
11 or under (5th roll): 15x

1 (1st roll): End game, lose bet
7 or 11 (1st to 4th roll): 1.5x
11 or under (5th roll): 50x

1 (1st roll): End game, but get half bet back
7 or 11 (1st to 4th roll): 1.5x
11 or under (5th roll): 40x

1 (1st roll): End game, but get all of bet back
7 or 11 (1st to 4th roll): 1.5x
11 or under (5th roll): 25x

The third version, with half the bet returned on a 1, is close enough to an even payout with perfect play that two players could take turns being the "house" outside of a casino-like establishment.  Lack of perfect play will give the house an edge, though, so players should at least agree on an even number of turns.  The second game has a payout of 99%, and the other two are around 98%.  Really, alternating house would work pretty well with any variant -- it probably depends whether you just want to have the players rolling dice or yourself as the GM.  The first version probably makes the most sense for a smaller "back-alley" games, with the lower 5th-roll payout requiring less of a safety-net bankroll.

Update: Check Crabjack-21 for a version using the d20!