No Dice?

From a New York Times article describing the Nature Theater of Oklahoma’s production of “No Dice:”

“Poetics,” for example, was choreographed using dice. Each face on the die represented one of six possible gestures, and each appendage — two arms, two legs and the head — got its own roll of the dice. Dice determined where the actors stand and for how long. There are four actors in “Poetics,” but, alas, no such thing as a four-sided die. So, to determine who did what, the directors used a dreidel.

No such thing as a four sided dice? Obviously no one among the choreographers has played Dungeons & Dragons:

6 Replies to “No Dice?”

  1. Indeed, this is deeply disturbing! Then again, back in the days of oldfashioned pen & paper cons, I remember a friend of mine asking for “six-sided dice” in a mom-and-pop store around the corner, and total incomprehension ensued—until one of us slightly rephrased the question.
    (Just got here after reading the article “Blog life: The Quantum Pontiff” on physicsworld.com, http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/indepth/32282 , and wouldn’t you know! The first posting I come across is about D&D …)
    ^_^J.

  2. I happen to be a collector of odd dice (as I think I mentioned in the lengthy probability debate). The strangest are two perfectly round dice that always show a number exactly face up (there’s a ball bearing rolling around inside and indentations into which it falls, thus forcing a particular number face up). I also have an interested pair of Kama Sutra dice, all the usual D&D dice, and plan to someday purchase a set of weather dice: http://www.dicecollector.com/THE_DICE_THEME_WEATHER.html. I’ve also seen a huge (and unwieldy) 100-sided die once.

  3. Really, though, a dreidl is most likely far better at achieving a random result than using a tetrahedral die – and you don’t have to worry about the dreaded “caltrop effect” with a dreidl!

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