Please Note: I’m a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.com. Amazon regularly posts and delists items so these may not all be in stock, and if you plan to purchase these for the holidays check delivery times as some may be shipped from overseas. Listings are in price order from lowest to highest.
Multicolored Dragon Scales Dice ($15)
These multicolored dice are solid metal — not the often lightweight dice that are common nowadays. They are glittery, fabulous, and multihued that reflects the light. All that, and they’re inexpensive too!
Red Copper Dragonbone Dice ($20)
This 7-die set contains 1 d20, 1 d12, 2 d10, 1 d8, 1 d6, and 1 d4. Made of zinc alloy, these polyhedral gaming dice are well balanced and easy to roll, with clear numbers on both sides that are resistant to wear. Inspired by the image of dragons, there’s a dragon head at the center of the d4 and a dragon in the background of the d6. The edges and corners are made to look like bone. I love it, and if you have a dragonborn or necromancer player (or ideally, both), they’ll love it too!
Octagonal Dice Tray ($25)
This is a simple black octagonal shape covered in black leather on the outside and red felt on the inside. This is important because leather will flex to temperature, and I had a heck of a time trying to separate the two pieces. If I were transporting dice, this would have been a disaster when I finally popped it open. Once I got it open, though, it was much easier to close and open again.
Pink Flower/Black Metal Dice ($30)
Perfect for deadly monks, necromancers with flare, or druids with a dark side, this metal dice set is hefty. The flower is in high contrast to the black, which makes it both attractive and legible (something all too rare with dice these days).
50MM 20-Sided Dragon Eyeball ($30)
Simply put, it’s a 20-sided die that features an eye theme and utilizes liquid core technology. What does that mean? There’s an eye suspended in liquid inside the die, and it magically manages to look up no matter how the dice lands or turns. It’s hefty enough to damage soft surfaces, so be sure to roll it away from your character sheets.
Castle Dice Tower ($40)
There are a lot of dice towers out there, and the definition of what’s a “dice tower” has increasingly been stretched to be just about anything that lets you drop dice onto the table (as one meme has pointed out, if you accidentally swallow dice, you’re a dice tower too … eventually). This is a genuinely large tower. It’s made of sections, all of thin pressed wood, which makes it suitable for painting. Each section connects to the one above it (and of course, the dice bounce back and forth throughout each section on the way down). That said, laser cut wood is flimsy, and this isn’t going to hold up to abuse. It’s more a set piece you use for your home games, not something that will travel well. But if you’re looking for a permanent dice tower that will impress your players, this will do nicely.
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