🎲 Elevate your game night with style and precision — let the dice decide in crystal-clear fashion!
The C4Labs Dice Tower & Tray combines thick clear acrylic with laser-cut wooden paddles to create a visually stunning and tactile dice rolling experience. Measuring 10” tall and compatible with up to 30-sided dice, it includes a wooden tray and fits all C4Labs dice trays, making it a perfect gift for game enthusiasts seeking both function and flair.
J**G
Excellent dice tower
I've started playing a lot of cooperative and solo games which require rolling dice. I never did like rolling against myself or my friends for the enemy figures. So, I started searching for a dice tower and ended up purchasing this one after looking at about 20 different towers. This tower is the best combo of quality and value. The tower tall and provides nice sound as the dice tumble through the baffles. The baffles are wooden, which give a nice, deeper sound versus 100% acrylic towers. The tower comes in two parts (tower and dice catch/tray). You do not have to build the tower, as that part is fully assembled. The dice catch has some silicone pads on it to prevent the tower from sliding during use. The dice catch has a solid bottom, which can be a positive or negative depending on your needs. I've used oversized dice with no problems and have thrown 10 regular sized dice at a time without any jamming. I believe that you will run out of space in the dice catch before you will jam up this tower. I have not used the tower without the dice catch, but that is an option. With minimal effort, you could attach the tower to a larger dice tray if the catch isn't large enough for you. Overall an excellent product. Highly recommended.
W**T
Amazing Dice Tower, Gorgeous, Sturdy, Must Buy!
So I initially bought one of these for one of my fellow players in our weekly D&D game. There was concern his dice just kept rolling just a little too well. The DM was going to make them use the Roll20 dice roller, and we as a group like said Quantum dice roller. But we've been embracing the use of physical dice again, just gets that blood pumping when rolling dice. Fast forward to me ordering this for that player. This d20 hasn't rolled a 20 since. Also it hasn't rolled the same number twice in a row. But what it has done is randomized the dice really well, all the while looking gorgeous doing so. I loved how beautiful it looked in person, I ordered another one just for my own. Yeah, this is a beautiful dice tower, and quite sturdy, since I roll metal dice and it's holding up like a champ.
C**O
Comparing several dice towers
I wanted some dice towers. Here we are with the results; I have built and modified a few dice towers and am uploading a review of each of them.The following products are here reviewed:The Broken Token Modular Dice Tumbler - Base Side: $15.98 https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07B8W5MQP/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o03_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1The Broken Token Modular Dice Tumbler - Stair: $26.98 https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07B8F1XXK/ref=od_aui_detailpages00?ie=UTF8&psc=1The Broken Token Modular Dice Tumbler - Bones: $26.98https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B07B8HH3YC/ref=od_aui_detailpages00?ie=UTF8&psc=1Q-Workshop Color Dice Tower: $27.53https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B06XPYVFCM/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1Dice Tower and Dice Tray for Dice Games - by C4 Labs: $29.99https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B06WW2G572/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o08_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1Assembly: Here the C4-labs model wins as in you simply open the box and it is complete. I modified it by using some tack glue and felt to soften the noise of dice hitting the wooden base. You can see the appearance of the model in the attached photo; it's sturdy, solid, and can be broken down for ease of transport.The Broken Token towers require assembly. They should be assembled with wood glue for sturdiness; this process does not require any particular skill and takes appx 1 hour. The Broken Token towers require both a Tumbler and a Base Side for assembly as I made them. I used felt and tack to line them with felt to soften the noise of dice coming down the wood.The Broken Token offerings can be mixed-and-matched to make a taller tower. This may not be practical for a table. The Base may or may not be glued to the Tumbler..The Q-Workshop Color Dice Tower was the most difficult to build but not much more than the Broken Token towers. There were poorly-cut pieces that required some work with a hobby knife to fix. I used wood glue to finish the product. I then used a piece of cardboard to give the tower a base and lined it with felt to soften the sound. The Q-Workshop tower does NOT have a base and drops the dice right onto the table.Durability: The edge goes to the C4 model; the acrylic handles metal dice with ease and shows no signs of damage after testing it with 6 metal d20s at a time. It collapses for transport, so the base and the tower are not permanently attached. It is very hard to get to the internal shelves if you want to line them for more sound muffling.The Broken Token towers have two layers of wood which make them durable. They showed no damage after testing them with metal dice and are quite sturdy once the wood glue sets. If assembled without wood glue, they won't be as sturdy.The Q-Workshop Tower is the flimsiest - but not actually flimsy. If glued properly, it will certainly stand up to almost any abuse done to it. It showed no damage after I ran 6 metal d20 through it.Size: The C4-labs model is appx 10.25" high, 7.75 long, and 3" wide. The Broken Token towers are comparable at appx 9.75" high x 3.125" wide by 9.75" long. The Q-Labs is the smallest, at appx 6.75" high x 3.75 wide at the battlements (and appx 3" at the base) x 6.25" long.Noise: Adding felt to the base makes the towers much quieter but slows down the dice, resulting in reduced movement. This is most notable on d4. However, dice towers are nosier than rolling right on a table. The C4-labs and Q-Workshop Color Dice Thrower were both rather noisy to the point that you may find it a detraction. The Broken Token towers are fairly quiet with felt just at the base.Capacity: The Q-Workshop tower can handle appx 8 standard-sized dice before the tray backs up. The other towers were tested with 20d6 and passed them through every time with no problem.Reliability: All of the towers were undamaged and never blocked up when taking 6d20, plastic or metal. When taking 10d10 (plastic), the Q-Workshop tower would have a couple of backed-up dice. This is likely due to the felt I added. When taking 5d4, the same thing happened. The Q-Workshop tower can handle about 8 dice (except for d4) reliably. The Q-workshop tower could handle 3d4 at a time reliably. The other three towers took 20d6 with zero blockages in ten trials.No dice hopped out of the dice base on any trials.Secondary Use: The Q-Workshop tower can be a terrain feature easily.Bottom Line:Broken Token: Modular, may be stained, very neat design, quietest, highest price (tumbler + base)C4-labs: Sturdy, already assembled, loud, large, can be taken apart easilyQ-Workshop: Small, second use as a terrain piece, neat visual element, no bottom (I added one), can only handle a few d4 or a larger but still limited number of other dice.
A**N
Excellent quality! Arrived exactly as pictured.
I ordered this to put inside of a treasure chest for my husband to find at the end of his treasure hunt I made for him. He loved it! Our D&D group also thinks it's really cool. I love the clear sides so you can watch the dice fall from each level to the next, and it is expertly crafted. The bottom piece folds up and fits over the tower piece, so transporting is easy. There are rubber stoppers on the bottom of the pieces so it doesn't slide around. The wood is stained and looks rustic. Would definitely recommend!
N**W
Randomized and contained
This tower it's exactly what I hoped it would be. It's perfect for standard sized dice. I roll up to 10 at a time without trouble. For games that use more than that I use 1/4 inch dice. I've rolled 25 small dice with pretty good statistical diversity. I hate when dice ruin your game board or fall on the floor. The tray catches everything! The tower does make some noise when you roll a lot of dice; that's my only complaint. I'm afraid to try to disassemble it to put some felt on the tumblers. The acrylic tower is very sturdy and doesn't appear glued, but I think it would crack with too much pressure. Great buy, I definitely recommend for games like D&D, Warhammer, Zombicide, or even Yahtzee!
I**N
Gaming for over 30 years, love this dice tower
It isn't the most spectacular dice tower out there. But is holds its own in being striking and pretty in its simplicty. I like it because you can watch the dice roll as they go. And the wood and plastic combo is just perfect. Sure its clunky sounding and loud. Hello! Dice tower.The catch tray works wonderfully. Haven't had any dice fly out of the tray yet. I have very nice metal dice (thanks wife for the gift,) and junky plastic dice (pound of dice variety) and chessex sets and many many more. This dice tower handles them all very very well.And the storage? So easy to do.Super happy with it.
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