How to play Dice and Slice
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- Опубліковано 15 вер 2024
- Learn the rules to the board game Dice and Slice quickly and concisely - This video has no distractions, just the rules.
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RULES:
The object of the game is to score the most points. You score points by slicing your pizza scoresheet into high scoring slices. Give each player a scoresheet and pencil. Set up the box dice tower like so. The player who most recently ate pizza goes first. On your turn, drop both dice in the dice tower to roll them. Once rolled, pick one die and mark its dot arrangement on your scoresheet, then, all the other players must use the other die to mark its dot arrangement on their scoresheets.
When marking your scoresheet, you are allowed to rotate the dot arrangement in 90 degree increments to fit however you like, but you may not rotate it partially so it is diagonal. The dots on the die’s grid must line up with the dots on the scoresheet. Dots may be placed at the edge of your scoresheet so long as no dots are hanging off the edge of the grid. You are allowed to overlap any number of existing dots on your scoresheet, so long as at least 1 new dot is placed. Only mark newly placed dots, ignore overlaps.
Whenever 2 dots are orthogonally adjacent to each other, you must connect those dots with a line. Do not connect dots diagonally. Whenever you connect dots, you are slicing your pizza. Whenever you slice a square or rectangle shape in your scoresheet pizza that is made up of 15 or less of the smallest squares, you have created a scorable slice. Scorable slices cannot be in any shape other than a rectangle or square, and they may not contain any dots or lines inside them. If they do, then the slice is not scorable and will need to be sliced further into smaller pieces before it can score points.
The moment you fully enclose a scorable slice that contains one or more toppings in it, then you may immediately place an extra dot anywhere on your scoresheet for each topping, if you want. The dots must be placed that same turn, they cannot be saved for later. Bonus dots from toppings may only be used once, so once you place an extra dot, cross of the corresponding topping to indicate it. However, if a scorable slice with a topping was subdivided on a later turn and you haven’t used its bonus dot yet, then you could place the extra dot then.
The top of your scoresheet indicates topping bonuses you can score. The first player to make a scoreable slice that contains exactly the indicated toppings and nothing else, immediately scores the indicated bonus points by circling the bonus toppings while the other players cross them out. If multiple players score the same bonus at the same time, even if one of them used a bonus dot to do so, then both those players score the bonus points. Crossed off toppings used for bonus dots still count for toping bonuses; however once a scorable slice scores a topping bonus, those toppings may not score additional future topping bonus points if that scorable slice was reduced in size on a later turn. Toppings that earn bonus points still give you bonus dots the turn you earn them if you want.
The game ends at the end of the turn when one player has sliced the entire perimeter of their scoresheet pizza and has made slices inside of it in such a way that the pizza does not contain any slices larger than 15 squares. Players then calculate their scores by counting up the number of scorable slices with the same number of squares and entering those numbers on the right of their scoresheet then multiplying them by their point value. Slices that aren’t scorable don’t count for anything. Add up your bonus point total in the bottom box with the star. Add everything together and the player with the most points wins.
I like how every conceivable way to game the ruleset was found and explicitly ruled out.
Right? I was going to ask if you could have a slice with a single dot in the middle, but then realized that you would need a 4x4 square for that and that would be too big for a “slice”.
The way you describe the rules somehow gives me an impression that you had a lot of fun playing this game.
This game looks cool but I wish the score sheets were whiteboards that use dry erase markers so you could reuse them :/
The dice tower is a clever idea though, I really like its inclusion since dice can accidentally fly everywhere if you try to get a good roll. I love how it's styled after a pizza oven, too.
You’re supposed to use erasable pencils or erasable pens
You could always laminate a set of score sheets, then use erase board markers, although the scoring squares may be too small to write numbers in with thick markers.
@@MynameisnotGraey Not on this one. It includes a pack of 200 score sheets, along with 6 golf pencils (no erasers).
Are topping bonus points maintained even if later on you subdivide the slice with those toppings?
so, if you decide to play this while eating pizza, who goes first?
the person who ate a slice of pizza last
Papa's Pizzeria dice game?
Is this game really hard to keep track of by hand, or not so bad once you start doing it? This is my first time seeing it and it gives me the impression it might be better played as a computer game where it could keep track of all that stuff for you. That said, even though it looks complex it looks really fun.
Please make a video on how to play business game
Could you make a tutorial for Air, Land and Sea next? I’ve tried looking for tutorials, but they’re not great
What happened to the game manual, did your dog eat it (if you have one), or u lost it
@@thatoneflaregun3167 Was it
A-lost it
B- I don’t have the game and I’m looking for the tutorial to see if it’s good
C-dog ate it
D-idk
Can you do super Mario celebration monopoly please. Today is my birthday😊😊😊
Not to be confused with Slice & Dice the videogame
Fascinating game. I hope these sheets can be reusable.
If you want to make single-use game sheets reusable, you can always laminate them and use fine tip dry erase markers. Laminating machines are surprisingly cheap, plenty of options in the $15-$30 range.
@@xx99Username99xx That's true. Yahtzee is the same way. When you run out of score cards, you can write it down on notebook paper.
The game includes 200 score sheets, along with 6 pencils.
Like the other person said, you could always laminate a set of score sheets to use.
Man, this game is as complicated as 5D chess with multiverse time travel!
I thought that was board game of slice & dice on steam lol
1:35
Triple S Games : Scorable slice
What I hear first : Horrible slice
So, this is a pizza dice game?
Who goes first if all players ate pizza at one same party
No way I'm this early
NO ONE CARES
@@animalcheese no one cares about you replying to yourself
@@Nickel475 I know, that's why I said that
First 1000 views gang⬇️
like begger