These dice are pretty good. I've never been able to figure out how to use salt water to test the balance of dice, so I just rolled these and my other two sets of dice each 20 times and compared their mean rolls to a theoretical die. They came out with pretty unbiased rolls for the most part. I think that's how statistics work at least. You can see the charts in the photos I added. Columns (from left to right) are die type, 20 rolls, average roll, z-score (how many standard deviations above/below the expected mean they are). I tested 10 sets of dice total (last two not pictured).
The bags comfortably fit seven dice with enough room for a spare D6.
In terms of visual quality and durability, the gold and black dice are a little hard to read on the gold sides because the numbers are ALSO written in gold. There's also noticeable bubbles and distortions under the surface of some of the dice so they're likely to crack at corners if rolled on hard surfaces - a problem easily mitigated with felt from the dollar store.
These sets are about the same as what I would find in my local gaming store for $5.00 - $10.00 a set. At $2.50 a set, it's a great deal on plastic dice and enough to set up your group for tabletop games (or, if you're a GM like me, provide spare sets when players inevitably forget their own).
These dice are pretty good. I've never been able to figure out how to use salt water to test the balance of dice, so I just rolled these and my other two sets of dice each 20 times and compared their mean rolls to a theoretical die. They came out with pretty unbiased rolls for the most part. I think that's how statistics work at least. You can see the charts in the photos I added. Columns (from left to right) are die type, 20 rolls, average roll, z-score (how many standard deviations above/below the expected mean they are). I tested 10 sets of dice total (last two not pictured).
The bags comfortably fit seven dice with enough room for a spare D6.
In terms of visual quality and durability, the gold and black dice are a little hard to read on the gold sides because the numbers are ALSO written in gold. There's also noticeable bubbles and distortions under the surface of some of the dice so they're likely to crack at corners if rolled on hard surfaces - a problem easily mitigated with felt from the dollar store.
These sets are about the same as what I would find in my local gaming store for $5.00 - $10.00 a set. At $2.50 a set, it's a great deal on plastic dice and enough to set up your group for tabletop games (or, if you're a GM like me, provide spare sets when players inevitably forget their own).