![]() | Chapter 9: Props: Food, Clothing, Money, Toys, Books, Electronics | ![]() ![]() |
9.5. Dice and Playing Cards |
Most toys are single things, and no harder to create than any other small items, but games often require a multitude of tokens to be combined, and this can be logistically tricky.
The classic example is a pack of playing cards, where the player must individually control 52 items but without fussy commands or verbose text being printed back. Jokers Wild provides a simple "one card at a time" approach; Tilt 1 is more sophisticated, with 52 independently accessible cards; Tilt 2 can further judge the value of a selection of cards - the ranking of a poker hand.
Drawing cards from a shuffled pack is only one source of randomness. Games of chance also involve items drawn from a bag: Wonka's Revenge provides just such a lottery. More often, dice are thrown. A single die is easy enough:
The die is carried by the player. After dropping the die: say "It lands with [a random number from 1 to 6] uppermost." Understand "roll [something]" as dropping.
Quick, but not very good. Most dice games involve rolling more than one die at a time, to get a more interesting distribution of outcomes: they may also involve special rules applying to doubles, for instance. See Do Pass Go.
See Typography for on-screen notations for chess and card games
| ![]() ![]() A deck of cards which can be shuffled and dealt from. |
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| ![]() ![]() ![]() A deck of cards with fully implemented individual cards, which can be separately drawn and discarded, and referred to by name. |
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| ![]() ![]() ![]() A deck of cards with fully implemented individual cards; when the player has a full poker hand, the inventory listing describes the resulting hand accordingly. |
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| ![]() A lottery drum which redistributes the tickets inside whenever the player spins it. |
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| ![]() A pair of dice which can be rolled, and are described with their current total when not carried, and have individual scores when examined. |
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