Louis Zocchi, inventor of the d100, has died

(icv2.com)

43 points | by sgbeal 3 hours ago

7 comments

  • tgrover 37 minutes ago
    The amount of games that use those kinds of dice make his contribution to tabletop gaming incommensurable. Sad to see him passing. But 91 yo is more than respectable
    • melling 1 minute ago
      91 is respectable for a reasonable man in the early 21st century. A few unreasonable people want a bit more.
  • G_o_D 15 minutes ago
    The study of imperfection in dice that makes them settle on certain favoured numbers by Louis, helps clear superstitious story of Mahabharata whereby the character named Shakuni, had dice made of his dead father's ashes who/which always respects/fall on numbers he desired,threby winning/cheating in game of Chaupad, that ultimately lead to biggest war in human history
  • guyzero 2 hours ago
    More than just the d100 he was a pioneer of being very exacting when it came to making polyhedral dice. See http://www.1000d4.com/2013/02/14/how-true-are-your-d20s/
    • sgbeal 2 hours ago
      > More than just the d100 he was a pioneer of being very exacting when it came to making polyhedral dice.

      Absolutely, but i couldn't fit all of that into the subject line ;) and he's best known for the d100. Many of us remember the articles and ads from the 1980s describing the effort he put into that particular die.

  • sd9 16 minutes ago
    It had never occurred to me that somebody needed to invent polyhedral dice. There must be so many inventions in the world that I’m completely unaware that there was a point in time before which something didn’t exist and after that it did.
    • literalAardvark 4 minutes ago
      Everything you've ever seen that isn't sky, water, air, ground, life was invented by someone.

      Heck, many specimens of the last two are inventions, that are insignificant as a % of species but are in the worldwide top by biomass.

      It's quite difficult to leave the anthroposphere in much of the world.

  • 01HNNWZ0MV43FF 2 hours ago
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zocchihedron

    I didn't see a picture of Zocchi's d100, Wikipedia has one

    • pcblues 1 hour ago
      Interesting they had to redistribute the numbers to take account of its natural bias.
      • philipallstar 45 minutes ago
        Sort of crazy they didn't test it for bias before they released it!
  • pcblues 1 hour ago
    I just throw 17d6 and subtract 2.

    Problem solved.

    (I am joking!)

  • benj111 1 hour ago
    I've never played any games that require this, but the Wikipedia page makes reference to percentage rolls, but wouldn't you need 101 sides to get 0% and 100% for that?
    • sgbeal 1 hour ago
      > but wouldn't you need 101 sides to get 0% and 100% for that?

      There is no 0% in d100/d-percentile rolls. Every "how to interpret these dice" paragraph in games which use them will tell you to interpret 0-0 on 2d10 as 100, not 0. Or, hypothetically (but i don't recall having ever seen this), they'll have a stated range of 0 to 99 (inclusive). Either way, the numeric range spans precisely 100 digits.