Whether you are running a tabletop RPG, settling a debate or just need a number between one and twenty, the ChrysoKit Dice Roller handles it. Full RPG-style dice notation is supported.
Why use it
Most dice rollers are stuck on one configuration. Ours supports notation like '4d6+2' so you can roll exactly what your game asks for.
How to use the Dice Roller
- Pick a dice preset, or type custom notation.
- Press roll.
- Read the individual rolls and the total.
- Roll again as many times as you need.
Features worth knowing
RPG notation
Supports notation like '4d6+2', '2d20kh1' (advantage), '3d8r1' (reroll ones).
Roll history
See your last several rolls without scrolling away.
Cryptographic randomness
Genuinely random rolls, not predictable.
Pro tips
- '4d6 drop lowest' is the classic D&D ability score roll.
- Saving the roll history is useful for play-by-post games where you need a public log.
- If you are a DM, keep a tab open at the table; it is faster than dragging a dice tray around.
Privacy first. The Dice Roller runs entirely in your browser. Nothing you enter is sent to a server.
Tabletop, board games or settling small debates: the Dice Roller has a configuration for it. Bookmark and roll.
Open the tool: Dice Roller →
Remote game night, and what digital dice change about play
When a tabletop group goes remote, dice become the awkward part: someone claims a natural 20 over a webcam, and even among friends, the question of shared truth needs solving. A digital roller everyone can see... screen-shared, or each player rolling in view... restores the property physical dice had at the table: results that are public events, not reports.
Digital rolling also changes pacing in ways groups discover quickly. Complex expressions like 8d6 fire damage resolve instantly instead of through a sweep-and-recount of physical dice across a cluttered table. New players stop misreading a d12 as a d20. And nothing rolls under the sofa during the climactic encounter.
Something is lost too, and pretending otherwise convinces no one: the rattle, the suspense of a die wobbling on its edge, the table-wide groan as it settles. Some groups split the difference... physical dice for dramatic moments, digital for bulk rolls and remote sessions... which is a perfectly sensible treaty.
Beyond gaming, a roller earns its keep in classrooms (probability lessons become interactive when the whole class watches 100 rolls of 2d6 pile up around seven) and in any decision that needs weighted options: assign outcomes to ranges on a d20 and let the die arbitrate brainstorm priorities. The mechanism is ancient; only the table has changed.