• [XDA Developers] Someone made the perfect D&D companion with a Raspberry Pi

    From kyonshi@gmkeros@gmail.com to rec.games.frp.misc,rec.games.frp.dnd,comp.sys.raspberry-pi on Sun Apr 7 00:34:48 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    Source: https://www.xda-developers.com/perfect-dnd-companion-raspberry-pi/

    Someone made the perfect D&D companion with a Raspberry Pi
    No more hunting for lost dice under tables.

    By Simon Batt
    Published 1 day ago


    Key Takeaways

    * Love the feel of rolling dice, but hate losing them? Check out
    Mr. Dice - a Raspberry Pi creation for all your dice-rolling needs.
    * Mr. Dice handles multiple dice types, adds up results, and
    maintains manual interaction for a fun experience.
    * Abe's Projects made Mr. Dice, which might spark interest in
    creating your own digital dice roller at home.

    How do you like your dice? While some adore the tactile feel and sound
    of rolling physical dice, others prefer to have a computer calculate
    just how much damage their 9d6 spell did. And while there are plenty of
    apps out there that can handle it, why not go for something that will
    really get the party talking? Someone created their own dice-rolling
    device using a Raspberry Pi called "Mr. Dice", and it's a seriously cool-looking way to perform your dexterity saving throws.

    Mr. Dice, the amazing dice-rolling Raspberry Pi project

    https://youtu.be/7Y_vFvCPHmE?si=uetLjpB2t2IQglw2

    Mr. Dice is the ingenious invention of Abe's Projects on YouTube, who
    has done other such ventures such as a Pok|-dex that can scan and
    identify Pok|-mon. This time, he made himself a dice roller that can
    handle multiple different kinds of dice in one roll, plus adding
    everything up automatically. Despite being wholly digital, Mr. Dice
    still retains some of the manual interaction involved with dice rolling; instead of stating a result when you tell it to roll the dice, it
    rapidly goes through every number the die can roll. You can stop the
    "roll" by pressing a button on the side, which makes the roll feel more
    like something you did rather than something a computer did for you.

    At the time of writing, Abe hasn't released a written guide on how to
    create your own Mr. Dice, nor has he released the code behind the
    roller. And while eager D&D players have expressed interest in
    purchasing a unit for themselves, Abe has remained tight-lipped on the
    matter. While we hope Abe can release his materials so we can make our
    own at home, it still poses as a nice inspiration for people who want to
    make their own roller.
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  • From Spalls Hurgenson@spallshurgenson@gmail.com to rec.games.frp.dnd on Sat Apr 6 20:42:06 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    On Sun, 7 Apr 2024 00:34:48 +0200, kyonshi <gmkeros@gmail.com> wrote:

    Source: https://www.xda-developers.com/perfect-dnd-companion-raspberry-pi/

    Someone made the perfect D&D companion with a Raspberry Pi
    No more hunting for lost dice under tables.

    By Simon Batt
    Published 1 day ago


    Key Takeaways

    * Love the feel of rolling dice, but hate losing them? Check out
    Mr. Dice - a Raspberry Pi creation for all your dice-rolling needs.
    * Mr. Dice handles multiple dice types, adds up results, and
    maintains manual interaction for a fun experience.
    * Abe's Projects made Mr. Dice, which might spark interest in
    creating your own digital dice roller at home.

    How do you like your dice? While some adore the tactile feel and sound
    of rolling physical dice, others prefer to have a computer calculate
    just how much damage their 9d6 spell did. And while there are plenty of
    apps out there that can handle it, why not go for something that will
    really get the party talking? Someone created their own dice-rolling
    device using a Raspberry Pi called "Mr. Dice", and it's a seriously >cool-looking way to perform your dexterity saving throws.

    Mr. Dice, the amazing dice-rolling Raspberry Pi project

    https://youtu.be/7Y_vFvCPHmE?si=uetLjpB2t2IQglw2

    Mr. Dice is the ingenious invention of Abe's Projects on YouTube, who
    has done other such ventures such as a Pokodex that can scan and
    identify Pokomon. This time, he made himself a dice roller that can
    handle multiple different kinds of dice in one roll, plus adding
    everything up automatically. Despite being wholly digital, Mr. Dice
    still retains some of the manual interaction involved with dice rolling; >instead of stating a result when you tell it to roll the dice, it
    rapidly goes through every number the die can roll. You can stop the
    "roll" by pressing a button on the side, which makes the roll feel more
    like something you did rather than something a computer did for you.



    I can't say I'm all that impressed. Aside from it being a stand-alone
    device, it doesn't seem much different from the dozens (if not
    hundreds) of dice-rolling apps available on phones and tablets
    already. I have one where you can 'roll' the digital dice by shaking
    the device, and - similar to the machine described above - stop a
    'roll' by tapping the screen.

    I mean, it's great this guy is having fun making a pocket device for
    his own amusement, but it's hardly the sort of thing I'd want to build
    on my own when equally capable options are already available.


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  • From Justisaur@justisaur@yahoo.com to rec.games.frp.misc,rec.games.frp.dnd,comp.sys.raspberry-pi on Sat Apr 6 18:52:54 2024
    From Newsgroup: rec.games.frp.dnd

    On 4/6/2024 3:34 PM, kyonshi wrote:
    Source: https://www.xda-developers.com/perfect-dnd-companion-raspberry-pi/

    Someone made the perfect D&D companion with a Raspberry Pi
    No more hunting for lost dice under tables.

    By Simon Batt
    Published 1 day ago


    Key Takeaways

    -a-a-a * Love the feel of rolling dice, but hate losing them? Check out
    Mr. Dice - a Raspberry Pi creation for all your dice-rolling needs.
    -a-a-a * Mr. Dice handles multiple dice types, adds up results, and maintains manual interaction for a fun experience.
    -a-a-a * Abe's Projects made Mr. Dice, which might spark interest in creating your own digital dice roller at home.

    How do you like your dice? While some adore the tactile feel and sound
    of rolling physical dice, others prefer to have a computer calculate
    just how much damage their 9d6 spell did. And while there are plenty of
    apps out there that can handle it, why not go for something that will
    really get the party talking? Someone created their own dice-rolling
    device using a Raspberry Pi called "Mr. Dice", and it's a seriously cool-looking way to perform your dexterity saving throws.

    Mr. Dice, the amazing dice-rolling Raspberry Pi project

    https://youtu.be/7Y_vFvCPHmE?si=uetLjpB2t2IQglw2


    I have Dicenomicon on my phone which does the whole 3d dice rolling.
    It's pretty old, and probably obsolete. In fact I haven't even tried it
    in a long time, I'll see if it still works. Wow. So obsolete it
    doesn't even show up on my phone or the App store anymore. Or maybe
    that's from when I had an android and it's not on iPhone?

    That was about 5 years ago at least.

    Well there's something called Mighty Dice on my iPhone, looks like it
    does the same. It doesn't seem to let me roll 100 d6's at the same time though. Sad.
    --
    -Justisaur

    |+-|+
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