Poker dice

Each variety of poker dice varies slightly in regard to suits, though the ace of spades is almost universally represented.

9♣ and 10♦ are frequently found, while face cards are traditionally represented not by suit, but instead by color: red for kings, green for queens and blue for jacks.

In some variations, only two rolls are allowed,[3] and in others, the number of dice that may be re-rolled is limited to three.

Under these rules, the Straight (low straight) beats a Full House (unlike in card poker, but correctly reflecting its probability) but does not beat a Four of a Kind (incorrectly reflecting its lower probability).

A Flush (high straight) beats a Four of a Kind (unlike in card poker, but correctly reflecting its lower probability).

Marlboro once marketed a set of octahedral poker dice that included suits; each die had slightly different numberings, ranging from 7 up to ace.

The remaining 8 faces featured stars and acted as wild cards allowing for every possible poker hand to be rolled.

A set of poker dice owned by a member of the Royal Indian Army Service Corps during the Second World War
A set of poker dice and a dice cup
Three sets of poker dice