We received four d20s two regular sized and two extra large and a d4.
However, I understand that this would increase the costs and therefore price.
However, I couldnt help but wonder whether these dice roll true.
Similarly, I wouldnt expect to see many 19s, 9s, 3s, or 1s.
As a control, I also rolled a random d20 from my personal collection 250 times.
This die was from1985 Games lovely retro set, which I regularly use for myD&D sessions.
If the 1985 Games die turns out to be weighted, my DM is going to be so mad.
The reasons for this spread were simple.
I wanted to see if each die was, individually, weighted in any way.
250 rolls is not a flawless sample size, but its good enough.
Thats 1,000 dice rolls meticulously scored by hand.
I can also hear the sound of rolling dice when I sleep now.
Firstly, my wrist hurts.
Secondly, these dice seem fairly balanced.
Take a look at the graph above.
Theres no clear pattern or correlation.
However, there were a couple of conclusions we could draw from adding all three HeroForge dice together.
That being said, 19 is right on the bottom of the die, next to 9.
That result probably shouldnt have appeared so many times if it really was weighted.
Its also worth taking into account the frequency on each die.
Im working on an assumption that the coloured resin is potentially heavier than the clear resin.
Theres also the fact that these results arent reversible.
On the dragon dice alone, a 2 was rolled 21 times, just four below the expected average.
With a relatively small sample size, that doesnt seem like unreasonable variance.
In the meantime, these dice dont seem to be weighted in any meaningful way.
Theyre not particularly satisfying and land with a clunk rather than a clatter.
you could only fit a tiny little dude in a D4, so make it count.
Trust me, it wont work.
HeroForge steps up its virtual miniature making with Kitbashed, a great tool in the right hands