Something worth mentioning if you are going to be removing material from bone is to ALWAYS wear a respirator if bone dust might be created. That stuff can mess you up.
If you're gonna be a gambler character for the LARP you should do an episode then learning either some card flourishes or slight of hand as a good gambler tries not to leave everything up to chance. haha
We did similar videos about rogish skills! Loaded Dice/Coin Toss Cheat: ruclips.net/video/N0Pd-ASrM7M/видео.html Card Counting: ruclips.net/video/10HygUav5Yc/видео.html Mind Control: ruclips.net/video/SaCnmB1I9mo/видео.html Lock Picking with a Can: ruclips.net/video/cBqTB47eWjw/видео.html Lock Picking with a paper clip: ruclips.net/video/c4tSe8EHrRE/видео.html
The same is true for most polyhedral dice! The sum of opposite faces for a dN is N+1, which is also twice the average value of the roll Matt Parker has some great videos about the mathematics of dice rolling, opposite faces and making fair dice
One of my favorite old games like this is Mancala. It's so simple but after you play it for a while there's actually a lot of depth and strategy to your moves.
@@PixieNekoChan It's so easy to play too! As a kid we would play on the beach with pebble and by digging holes in the sand. You can really play it anywhere using anything.
Mancala is the best, and they have found it in very ancient layers. It's easier than checkers, harder than chess. Just depends on the level you're playing at. I think it gets skipped because it was never big in Europe.
Was going to mention hnefatafl as well. Another fun tavern-like game we called ren darts. Stick a dagger in the ground and everyone makes a ring around it then take turns throwing their own dagger to see who can stick one closest to the original. It's not great on the blades so I made a set of daggers out of a bar of 3/16 mild steel and an angle grinder. They don't even have to be very sharp as long as they are pointy.
@@hollyingraham3980 The Mumbleypeg I'm familiar with is the game where you place your hand on a table, fingers spread, you tap your dagger between the fingers, gaining speed as you repeat, sometimes varying the pattern of where you hit your knife: like thumb, pinky, ring index, or just going round the hand. Whoever goes the fastest without nicking their skin, wins.
I absolutely love Irving Finkel. No wonder I like you so much. My favorite is the video where he and others make a replica of the boat that Utnapishtam (Sumerian Noah) rode out the flood with. I was laughing so hard at his delivery.
Thank you so much. Directions and demonstration clear cut. I am a DIYer, crafter, maker, and rogue so I also love the spirit and care. I have a large smile plastered on my face after watching. Let the games begin.
I literally shouted out Yes! when you got to the Royal Game of Ur! So fun! My kids love to play it with me, and it's really cool to think about all of the amazing people in history who probably knew how to play it. And Irving Finkle is the best idiosyncratic professor ever ❤️
Man, I discovered your channel like three days ago and have binged a BREATHTAKING amount of videos. And then you drop this one today, which happens to be basically exactly what I was thinking about trying to do. 10/10 banger video, incredible content
Those are awesome. One board game I've never gotten tired of playing is Chinese Checkers. My Grandfather used to make boards to sell in the flea markets down in Florida. Super easy to make and spaces for up to 8 people to play made it pretty popular in the retirement community. They are big, though, so not exactly a portable game.
This is so awesome :) When you use the saw, I'm reminded of being shown to use sticks or small pieces of wood to guide what you're cutting through the saw. So that your precious fingers never have to come so close to the blade
You might want to line your bench hole with a length of metal pipe. The closer the hole size is to your holdfast clamp the better it will work and the piping will stop the wooden hole being widened and distorted by the metal shaft of the holdfast
One can drill out and plug a hole too. All you need to do is take some scrap wood and a hole saw and cut out a hole and then remove the piolite bit and clamp that scrap to the bench and use the hole as a guide and cut the hole out. Then using the correct over sized hole saw cut out the correct plug using the same method. Then glue it. This is the cheap and easy way to do it. The next way is to use a chisle and chisle out a squre block and cut a square block and glue it in and redrill your hole. Ideally you want to go to a tree and cut you a bunch of branches with a good size wye on them. Then strip the bark off them and then start to use them. Shave them down to fit the holes and use linseed oil on everything. There might be severa table videos you can find on how to make a really nice table from a tree trunk. A nice wood working table and taking your time building it will last a very long time. You can even build a simple wood wedge vise.
You have so much enthusiasm! Thanks for the video. This is such a neat little project. Be careful with that holdfast. That is a cast holdfast and cast iron doesn't handle impact well and can snap pretty easily. For light use they are fine, but don't wail on them. You can put a leather pad on them to protect the wood that you're holding down as well. It's a nice quick little project. A forged to holdfast will cost 3 to 4 times as much but you'll break your workbench before you break the holdfast.
With the alabaster dice, you might want to seal them...a bit of spray on varnish would protect them rather well. Also, since you have a laser, you could make a rather neat option for cards. A friend of mine bought some sheets of veneer and a simple design for a deck followed by a spray on varnish
The first game one should make a bet area so you can lay down some coins. This way when you win or robo your opponent you draw your strings in and away you go! I love this channel. Its quite good. Now back to the games!
One underrated tavern-esque game is crokinole, basically tabletop curling. I spent quite a few nights as a kid with the power out playing that by candle/ stove light and drinking stovetop hot chocolate
If you haven't come to Utah and gone to Evermore you're missing out! Its a fun little larp amusement park for both those who enjoy dressing the part of a quest participant, and regular people who dont get into the whole fan fair.
Love how the cards turned out. I made a similar 9 men's morris. used soft leather and burned the lines in with a wood burning/soldering pen tool. The lines weren't as straight as yours, plus I didn't think to make it double as a pouch. That is an excellent idea. Another game you can make is Mancala. Thanks for the inspirations..
I've been working on a set of coasters that are mini board games, and this video just might be the one that kicks me back into work on them! The only one I've finished so far is the Nine Man Morris board!
For anyone running the games; using the translucent alabaster is a good way to prove to anyone that the dice are not loaded. (with lead, at least) edit: came back after watching Tom Scott and Irving Finkel play Ur. Thank you, Kit! That was amazing. I hope someday we can play Ur by the fire at a LARP!
When I was young I played Solitaire at my maternal grandmother's house. But not the card variant, it was the wood board variant. It was a board with a cross of holes (I think it was 4x4 on the parts outside the middle but not sure as it was given to a cousin who loved it as well when my grandmother died more than two decades ago). Into each hole you fitted a small stake (the board was pale and the stakes were black). At the start you removed the stake in the middle and from then on to remove a stake you have to use a stake to "jump" over the stake you want to remove. The fewer stakes you have at the end you cannot remove since you cannot jump over one of them the better. The goal is to have only one left. A great game for the silent loner types sitting in a corner of the tavern.
You can contact cement some heavy weight leather to, or make a leather "sock" that goes over, the face of the holdfast for a more permanent method of preventing the metal from marring the wood.
One note on your dice. Back in ancient times the Chinese would drill the pip that is the one a bit larger. The reason for this is that it would make the dice more fair. The reason this works is because of the amount of material cut out of the 6 pip side is lighter than the side with the one pip. The heavier side will more frequently land on the bottom. Cool project. I am going to make this board using a piece of wood this weekend. Should be fun! TY sir!
Also remember if you want to make the dice balanced number wise two sides added together will equal 7. so 1 and 6, 2 and 5, 4 and 3 are on opposite sides of each other. Funny I've made a lot of these already, but I want to make them again since I have leveled up in my skills. The Ur game I have only made in paper, but would love to do it out of wood.
Quick and easy tip for the clamps and the extra blocks you used when gluing up the Royal Game of Ur. Slap some brown plastic parcel tape on them and the wood glue won't stick so easily to the bits that need to be removed.
Sometimes in pet stores, You can find solid sections of water Buffalo horn. Cut out your half inch by half inch by half inch cube sand as you would the bone and use the Dremel for your pips. Main difference would be using white fingernail polish to fill in the pips. These dice would be easier to use in low light or at night
Just an FYI, I just watched an episode with Josh Gates on Expedition Unknown and he was treasure hunting and they found some lead made dice from around 1300 years ago which is not only awesome but surprising. So in essence it would be viable to have metal(lead) dice included. Awesome leveling up today!!!
i really enjoyed watching this vid, i know you already know this but, for liars dice you need 10 bone dice(5 dice each) and 2 wooden cups(you should make the cups in another vid), plus the designed-leather mat to play it on(make it look old/destressed/used).and don't forget if your gonna be the gambler-larp you need a gamblers feathered hat-lol.
The "clamp" is called a holdfast and is commonly used in wood working and blacksmithing. I made one out of rebar a few years back for use when forging.
One of my favorite stories is when my wife, a friend, and I decided to play a period card game at a faire themed around the Three Musketeers. We picked up a tarot deck with old artwork and learned to play French Tarot, a 3- to 5-player point-trick-taking card game. Dressed in garb, we must have spent 2 hours just playing in the tavern.
The same idea as you used for your nine men's morris, I have been wanting to do similar for a Tak (from the King Killers chronicles) set. I love the idea of just having this little pouch that I can hook onto my belt and set up in seconds on any flat surface. Ur is a fun game to DIY. You can take so many liberties with all the pieces to make it your own. The one I made is a box that contains all the pieces and the board is the lid that slides off. I used clay for the all the little pieces. Sculpting a bunch of D4s out of clay was a pain in the ass but I love the way they turned out. It's an awesome game to play sitting next to a camp fire.
Got a rock tumbler? Tumble those dice to knock off those sharp edges and corners, plus polish the faces. Dice with rounded corners and edges are “livelier”, rolling farther before coming to rest. They also feel nicer in the hand and won’t look so new. Use a relatively soft abrasive like crushed walnut shells.
A fun thing about the Game of Ur, is that no one knows the actual historical rules, just that it's a race game that probably has rules for capturing opponents like Pachisi/Parcheesi and Sorry! Finkel's rules make for a quick game but don't account for why the pieces have one decorated and one undecorated side. There are many suggested alternate rulesets you can find, and it's fun to come up with your own house rules. Irving Finkel has a paper translating some rules from an ancient cuneiform tablet, but the rules are clearly either for using the game board for fortune telling or gambling. It describes knucklebone dice and different bird-pieces to be used with the game board, but no archaeological sites actually have those with the game boards, so the tablet was probably for alternate rules. No one needed to write down the actual rules for the game because everyone learned to play by playing with people who already knew the rules.
There are plenty other games you could make, one of my favorites is an ancient chinese game called Xi Gua Qi or watermelon chess as it is known as in english. In general i'll recomend checking out Newventure games here om youtube, they have a lot of old games they've made into little peg games. Happy crafting and happy gaming!
You could have also pre-marked the faces of the bone, and then heated up the point on a sharp nail. Pressing the point into the bone will burn in a divet, and then you can put a finishing coat of linseed oil/ or boild linseed oil
This has inspired me to craft my own game of Ur (which I already wanted to play as an Irving Finkel fan) specifically to bring it to Conquest of Mythodea 2024, thank you !
Here in the Philippines we still play that and it's too be fancy we draw it on concrete chair and others and the piece's is stick's and stone. But without the cards 😊
You should use a 3d printer. If you print in TPU and give it a lot of infill, then it’s difficult to break with a sledgehammer. And you can make anything you can 3d model or find that someone else modeled
Hey how about a war apron, like if your a fantasy bar keep but you have to defend your tavern from an incoming horde of cheap but uppity goblins. Like the cloth on the outside but leather armor on their side
I recommended for your next set of bone dice something other than cow bone; cow bone is VERY porous. Elk or Camel are both very hard bones that polish into that bone white; bonus fact camel bones are so dense you can make edged weapons out of them. Bonus craft: have you ever "boned" a piece of wood? Stop the giggles NOW! Boning is where for a final polish you rub a bone or antler over the wood, various chemicals in the antler and bone will colour the grain of the wood, my husband like to use it especially on small wood working projects like jewelry boxes and hairsticks as a final touch before wax or sealant. Quick colour guide deer=green, elk=brown, buffalo(water)=white, moose=pink, bull= gold, petrified reindeer=silver(very incomplete list)
Alabaster is semi porous you can seal it with an oil or wax to stop it picking stuff up something like a clear nail polish could also add some durability.
For the first game, you could also just hand-draw the board with a pencil and use a wood-burner to go over the lines afterwards. It would give that hand made appearance and the tools are super inexpensive. The lines wouldn't bleed if they got wet either. For the dice, if you can't find bone that is thick enough to cut into the right size, you could either change the shape of the dice (in ancient Egypt they used both throw-sticks, similar to what you made for the third game, and the first d20s), or you can use antlers or horns. Specifically, water buffalo horns are solid and are fairly cheap at Walmart. They usually come in black, though. But wood isn't out of the question, either, though they'd probably be a little light. Personally, I'd steer clear of any modern techniques of manufacturing for a one-off item for personal use, or for any item for a personal gift. Hand crafted items look much better, and are perceived as being a higher quality, especially with their flaws. That being said, if you were making these to sell at festivals or events, using a laser engraver would net the most profit. For the cards, for a one-off item I'd definitely take the time to make my own. Get some card-stock, cut everything out by hand, hand paint it all, then distress it a little, but only with natural things like dirt and handling. Just sit and watch a couple of movies with dirty hands and play with all the cards, like shuffling and riffling.
Just a suggestion, as you are into D&D. The PHB has a trinket that says "A pair of knucklebone dice, each with a skull symbol on the side that would normally show six pips" you now know how to make those authentically for your character.
I made my own royal game of ur out of wood pieces and put a draw into it to hold the dice and game pieces. My dice are blank d4's that were marked on the die like Irving Finkel uses. Because my character is Norse I used runes and the rosettes as the double roll squares. I also made a pouch version of the scandinavian game: Hnefatafl (predates chess) - with the board as the board and wooden circles as the pieces.
For those who didn't see the video, he was referencing the rules of the game (like me, since I'm on my phone) you can go to the description under the video.
I've been inspired to start a project of my own. It's gonna be a drawstring pouch with three compartments. The idea is to keep dice, larp money, and real money separate. It'll also have an exterior pocket, a belt loop, and a key ring to hang another pouch or some keys
In real medieval inns, taverns and hospitals the gameboard was often carved into the tables (very roughly) also they liked drinking games and puzzle mugs.
Hint for people making stencils out of plastic or cardstock - use Pixie Spray or Alene's Tack It Over And Over on the back. These are low-tack repositionable glues which can cover all the tiny areas of the stencil and makes them reusable.
I thought for sure you were making Petteia on the leather. This game would also work and dates all the way back to ancient, Pre-Rome, Greece. But, it's a game of skill, not of chance. So I see in retrospect why this may not be a great choice for "tavern games". Still, if any of you reading this have never played it, look it up, it's fun and easy to make using the same instructions for the first game in this very video!
@6:20 The Rogue in me would want to wrap those game pieces in extra material or an additional bag in order to be stealthy. I'd hate to be running and it sound like I have Tic Tac's in me pockets
If you want to be really accurate, I've been told that as gambling was forbidden in medieval times, they were using bone dices small enough so that you could swallow them easily.
I do love your enthusiasm and feel you must have been an actor in some life!! I'm making a wild west themed escape room scenario and think some of these games might make good props at the very least, added ambience. Thanks for the inspiration.
Parchesi is an ancient game. It came out of India I believe. It is like the Hasbro game of Trouble but just a little more sophisticated. It is larger so it might need to be rolled up and put in a tube with a latching cap and the game pieces and dice on the inside.
Hey clever. I don’t mess with a cricket but a buddy of mine that does work with vinyl uses press and seal for Tupperware instead of transfer sheets. Says it works like a charm and is like $3 for 70 feet.
I once made an Ur board out of lego. I used different colors to represent the different tiles and I used 1x1 cones and cylinder blocks for pieces. The only thing that wasnt lego were the dice which I just used 1d4 for and just said evens are pips, odd is no pip.
9 Man's Morris, or "Mill" as we used to call it growing up. An even easier approach would be to scratch or draw it or a tabletop and just use coins. Admittedly, that's not nearly as fancy. (We had a wooden game board and used checkers, but different coins would work just as well.)
You definitely have to make a cane to go with your character but I suggest you make a shillelagh(an Irish walking stick/club used by pub gents) or a larp safe one at least lol
Hi Clever, subscribed after watching Staff of the Wandererand binged your content, first time commenting. It always makes me laugh when you say you're cheap, then make something that looks expensive😂😂also, the tool you used is a bench holdfast. Looking forward to more excellent content. I would love to see your dogs reaction to finding his bones missing...I'm picturing him strapping on his armour muttering 'OK...bones missing...let's do this. The hunt is on!!!' 😂😂😂
For fabric use eyelets. (Grommets and eyelets are basically the same thing but grommets are used for heavier materials and eyelets are used for lighter materials.) Any sewing or craft store should have eyelets. You can apply eyelets the same way as grommets with the hammer or you can use eyelet pliers.
Damn! Haven't played that game in years. I used to play it a lot with gramps but last time it was 15 years ago give ot take i think... It's great old game with literary 3 or 4 simple rules more or less. How the game turns out for you and your opponent depends on how you set your pieces so step 1: Drop pieces on board if done carefully can turn game around for you at the very beginning.
Something worth mentioning if you are going to be removing material from bone is to ALWAYS wear a respirator if bone dust might be created. That stuff can mess you up.
Same with stone of any kind
You're right, but he has mentioned this in a previous video. Definitely worth a mention though. Cheers mate.🧙♂
Amusing how something we’re made out of can be so harmful if you relocate the material to a different part of the body.
@@ZanarCrestriderstomach acid urine feces ur iwn immune system yea ur right
Dito for antler dust! Safe making everyone.
If you're gonna be a gambler character for the LARP you should do an episode then learning either some card flourishes or slight of hand as a good gambler tries not to leave everything up to chance. haha
We did similar videos about rogish skills!
Loaded Dice/Coin Toss Cheat: ruclips.net/video/N0Pd-ASrM7M/видео.html
Card Counting: ruclips.net/video/10HygUav5Yc/видео.html
Mind Control: ruclips.net/video/SaCnmB1I9mo/видео.html
Lock Picking with a Can: ruclips.net/video/cBqTB47eWjw/видео.html
Lock Picking with a paper clip: ruclips.net/video/c4tSe8EHrRE/видео.html
@Skill Tree oh yeah!! Those are great videos, too. I forgot. Wooooo a true rogue of legends!!!
Maybe a collab with The Modern Rogue?
@Nigel Hirth ooh, that would be sick.
@@nigelhirth2181 Oh man; Brian would drive Kit crazy with prank magic before teaching him how to do it himself. xD
One tip, for cube dice, the sum of the opposite sides is always 7.
Opposite sides add up to 7, i.e. 6s opposite is 1. Just adding this because it took me a minute to understand what you meant
The same is true for most polyhedral dice! The sum of opposite faces for a dN is N+1, which is also twice the average value of the roll
Matt Parker has some great videos about the mathematics of dice rolling, opposite faces and making fair dice
One of my favorite old games like this is Mancala. It's so simple but after you play it for a while there's actually a lot of depth and strategy to your moves.
We had a mancala board when I was younger and I LOVED playing it!
@@PixieNekoChan It's so easy to play too! As a kid we would play on the beach with pebble and by digging holes in the sand. You can really play it anywhere using anything.
Mancala is the best, and they have found it in very ancient layers. It's easier than checkers, harder than chess. Just depends on the level you're playing at.
I think it gets skipped because it was never big in Europe.
I feel like every person I played mancala with learned a slightly different set of rules, which does complicate things a smidge
In our country we have a version of this game called sungka. It's actually very fun
For the pouch, I use a dice with a hole drilled through it to cinch and keep it shut
Was going to mention hnefatafl as well. Another fun tavern-like game we called ren darts. Stick a dagger in the ground and everyone makes a ring around it then take turns throwing their own dagger to see who can stick one closest to the original. It's not great on the blades so I made a set of daggers out of a bar of 3/16 mild steel and an angle grinder. They don't even have to be very sharp as long as they are pointy.
Ahh, ancient lawn darts!
They used to call it mumblety-peg. Look it up to complicate your play.
@@hollyingraham3980 The Mumbleypeg I'm familiar with is the game where you place your hand on a table, fingers spread, you tap your dagger between the fingers, gaining speed as you repeat, sometimes varying the pattern of where you hit your knife: like thumb, pinky, ring index, or just going round the hand. Whoever goes the fastest without nicking their skin, wins.
I absolutely love Irving Finkel. No wonder I like you so much. My favorite is the video where he and others make a replica of the boat that Utnapishtam (Sumerian Noah) rode out the flood with. I was laughing so hard at his delivery.
Thank you so much. Directions and demonstration clear cut. I am a DIYer, crafter, maker, and rogue so I also love the spirit and care. I have a large smile plastered on my face after watching. Let the games begin.
I literally shouted out Yes! when you got to the Royal Game of Ur! So fun! My kids love to play it with me, and it's really cool to think about all of the amazing people in history who probably knew how to play it. And Irving Finkle is the best idiosyncratic professor ever ❤️
Man, I discovered your channel like three days ago and have binged a BREATHTAKING amount of videos. And then you drop this one today, which happens to be basically exactly what I was thinking about trying to do. 10/10 banger video, incredible content
Those are awesome. One board game I've never gotten tired of playing is Chinese Checkers. My Grandfather used to make boards to sell in the flea markets down in Florida. Super easy to make and spaces for up to 8 people to play made it pretty popular in the retirement community. They are big, though, so not exactly a portable game.
It would be if you could make it fold into itself somehow, like fold up and hold all the marbles inside...
This is so awesome :) When you use the saw, I'm reminded of being shown to use sticks or small pieces of wood to guide what you're cutting through the saw. So that your precious fingers never have to come so close to the blade
You might want to line your bench hole with a length of metal pipe. The closer the hole size is to your holdfast clamp the better it will work and the piping will stop the wooden hole being widened and distorted by the metal shaft of the holdfast
One can drill out and plug a hole too. All you need to do is take some scrap wood and a hole saw and cut out a hole and then remove the piolite bit and clamp that scrap to the bench and use the hole as a guide and cut the hole out. Then using the correct over sized hole saw cut out the correct plug using the same method. Then glue it.
This is the cheap and easy way to do it.
The next way is to use a chisle and chisle out a squre block and cut a square block and glue it in and redrill your hole.
Ideally you want to go to a tree and cut you a bunch of branches with a good size wye on them. Then strip the bark off them and then start to use them. Shave them down to fit the holes and use linseed oil on everything.
There might be severa table videos you can find on how to make a really nice table from a tree trunk. A nice wood working table and taking your time building it will last a very long time. You can even build a simple wood wedge vise.
You have so much enthusiasm! Thanks for the video. This is such a neat little project.
Be careful with that holdfast. That is a cast holdfast and cast iron doesn't handle impact well and can snap pretty easily. For light use they are fine, but don't wail on them. You can put a leather pad on them to protect the wood that you're holding down as well. It's a nice quick little project. A forged to holdfast will cost 3 to 4 times as much but you'll break your workbench before you break the holdfast.
With the alabaster dice, you might want to seal them...a bit of spray on varnish would protect them rather well.
Also, since you have a laser, you could make a rather neat option for cards. A friend of mine bought some sheets of veneer and a simple design for a deck followed by a spray on varnish
The first game one should make a bet area so you can lay down some coins. This way when you win or robo your opponent you draw your strings in and away you go!
I love this channel. Its quite good. Now back to the games!
One underrated tavern-esque game is crokinole, basically tabletop curling. I spent quite a few nights as a kid with the power out playing that by candle/ stove light and drinking stovetop hot chocolate
If you haven't come to Utah and gone to Evermore you're missing out! Its a fun little larp amusement park for both those who enjoy dressing the part of a quest participant, and regular people who dont get into the whole fan fair.
Love how the cards turned out. I made a similar 9 men's morris. used soft leather and burned the lines in with a wood burning/soldering pen tool. The lines weren't as straight as yours, plus I didn't think to make it double as a pouch. That is an excellent idea. Another game you can make is Mancala. Thanks for the inspirations..
I've been working on a set of coasters that are mini board games, and this video just might be the one that kicks me back into work on them! The only one I've finished so far is the Nine Man Morris board!
For anyone running the games; using the translucent alabaster is a good way to prove to anyone that the dice are not loaded. (with lead, at least)
edit: came back after watching Tom Scott and Irving Finkel play Ur. Thank you, Kit! That was amazing. I hope someday we can play Ur by the fire at a LARP!
When I was young I played Solitaire at my maternal grandmother's house. But not the card variant, it was the wood board variant. It was a board with a cross of holes (I think it was 4x4 on the parts outside the middle but not sure as it was given to a cousin who loved it as well when my grandmother died more than two decades ago). Into each hole you fitted a small stake (the board was pale and the stakes were black). At the start you removed the stake in the middle and from then on to remove a stake you have to use a stake to "jump" over the stake you want to remove. The fewer stakes you have at the end you cannot remove since you cannot jump over one of them the better. The goal is to have only one left. A great game for the silent loner types sitting in a corner of the tavern.
You can contact cement some heavy weight leather to, or make a leather "sock" that goes over, the face of the holdfast for a more permanent method of preventing the metal from marring the wood.
One note on your dice. Back in ancient times the Chinese would drill the pip that is the one a bit larger. The reason for this is that it would make the dice more fair. The reason this works is because of the amount of material cut out of the 6 pip side is lighter than the side with the one pip. The heavier side will more frequently land on the bottom. Cool project. I am going to make this board using a piece of wood this weekend. Should be fun! TY sir!
Also remember if you want to make the dice balanced number wise two sides added together will equal 7. so 1 and 6, 2 and 5, 4 and 3 are on opposite sides of each other. Funny I've made a lot of these already, but I want to make them again since I have leveled up in my skills. The Ur game I have only made in paper, but would love to do it out of wood.
Quick and easy tip for the clamps and the extra blocks you used when gluing up the Royal Game of Ur. Slap some brown plastic parcel tape on them and the wood glue won't stick so easily to the bits that need to be removed.
Sometimes in pet stores, You can find solid sections of water Buffalo horn. Cut out your half inch by half inch by half inch cube sand as you would the bone and use the Dremel for your pips. Main difference would be using white fingernail polish to fill in the pips. These dice would be easier to use in low light or at night
Just an FYI, I just watched an episode with Josh Gates on Expedition Unknown and he was treasure hunting and they found some lead made dice from around 1300 years ago which is not only awesome but surprising. So in essence it would be viable to have metal(lead) dice included. Awesome leveling up today!!!
i really enjoyed watching this vid, i know you already know this but, for liars dice you need 10 bone dice(5 dice each) and 2 wooden cups(you should make the cups in another vid), plus the designed-leather mat to play it on(make it look old/destressed/used).and don't forget if your gonna be the gambler-larp you need a gamblers feathered hat-lol.
"how about a little game, traveler?"
The "clamp" is called a holdfast and is commonly used in wood working and blacksmithing. I made one out of rebar a few years back for use when forging.
One of my favorite stories is when my wife, a friend, and I decided to play a period card game at a faire themed around the Three Musketeers.
We picked up a tarot deck with old artwork and learned to play French Tarot, a 3- to 5-player point-trick-taking card game. Dressed in garb, we must have spent 2 hours just playing in the tavern.
The same idea as you used for your nine men's morris, I have been wanting to do similar for a Tak (from the King Killers chronicles) set. I love the idea of just having this little pouch that I can hook onto my belt and set up in seconds on any flat surface.
Ur is a fun game to DIY. You can take so many liberties with all the pieces to make it your own. The one I made is a box that contains all the pieces and the board is the lid that slides off. I used clay for the all the little pieces. Sculpting a bunch of D4s out of clay was a pain in the ass but I love the way they turned out. It's an awesome game to play sitting next to a camp fire.
Got a rock tumbler? Tumble those dice to knock off those sharp edges and corners, plus polish the faces.
Dice with rounded corners and edges are “livelier”, rolling farther before coming to rest. They also feel nicer in the hand and won’t look so new.
Use a relatively soft abrasive like crushed walnut shells.
A fun thing about the Game of Ur, is that no one knows the actual historical rules, just that it's a race game that probably has rules for capturing opponents like Pachisi/Parcheesi and Sorry! Finkel's rules make for a quick game but don't account for why the pieces have one decorated and one undecorated side. There are many suggested alternate rulesets you can find, and it's fun to come up with your own house rules.
Irving Finkel has a paper translating some rules from an ancient cuneiform tablet, but the rules are clearly either for using the game board for fortune telling or gambling. It describes knucklebone dice and different bird-pieces to be used with the game board, but no archaeological sites actually have those with the game boards, so the tablet was probably for alternate rules. No one needed to write down the actual rules for the game because everyone learned to play by playing with people who already knew the rules.
As someone who loves larp stuff those cards look awesome. As someone who loves cards you taking the sandpaper to them hurt
There are plenty other games you could make, one of my favorites is an ancient chinese game called Xi Gua Qi or watermelon chess as it is known as in english.
In general i'll recomend checking out Newventure games here om youtube, they have a lot of old games they've made into little peg games.
Happy crafting and happy gaming!
I love Dr Iving Finkel! The Royal game of Ur is so interesting. And a good pub game.
You could have also pre-marked the faces of the bone, and then heated up the point on a sharp nail. Pressing the point into the bone will burn in a divet, and then you can put a finishing coat of linseed oil/ or boild linseed oil
This has inspired me to craft my own game of Ur (which I already wanted to play as an Irving Finkel fan) specifically to bring it to Conquest of Mythodea 2024, thank you !
Here in the Philippines we still play that and it's too be fancy we draw it on concrete chair and others and the piece's is stick's and stone. But without the cards 😊
You should use a 3d printer. If you print in TPU and give it a lot of infill, then it’s difficult to break with a sledgehammer. And you can make anything you can 3d model or find that someone else modeled
I love the enthusiasm that is put into each video on this channel.
Hey how about a war apron, like if your a fantasy bar keep but you have to defend your tavern from an incoming horde of cheap but uppity goblins. Like the cloth on the outside but leather armor on their side
my wife made fabric bag board games years ago. its cool seeing the idea come up with again
Made a Glückhaus game a few months ago painted on canvas to roll up. It stores in a scroll tube box i scratch built as well. Lots of fun.
This just gave me the idea to make draw-string pouch Ur boards with leather by stitching the squares and using rocks or coins as pieces. Thanks!
"Yep" that's all I could say as soon as I saw this just "yep" ❤❤❤🎉
I recommended for your next set of bone dice something other than cow bone; cow bone is VERY porous. Elk or Camel are both very hard bones that polish into that bone white; bonus fact camel bones are so dense you can make edged weapons out of them. Bonus craft: have you ever "boned" a piece of wood? Stop the giggles NOW! Boning is where for a final polish you rub a bone or antler over the wood, various chemicals in the antler and bone will colour the grain of the wood, my husband like to use it especially on small wood working projects like jewelry boxes and hairsticks as a final touch before wax or sealant. Quick colour guide deer=green, elk=brown, buffalo(water)=white, moose=pink, bull= gold, petrified reindeer=silver(very incomplete list)
Alabaster is semi porous you can seal it with an oil or wax to stop it picking stuff up something like a clear nail polish could also add some durability.
For the first game, you could also just hand-draw the board with a pencil and use a wood-burner to go over the lines afterwards. It would give that hand made appearance and the tools are super inexpensive. The lines wouldn't bleed if they got wet either.
For the dice, if you can't find bone that is thick enough to cut into the right size, you could either change the shape of the dice (in ancient Egypt they used both throw-sticks, similar to what you made for the third game, and the first d20s), or you can use antlers or horns. Specifically, water buffalo horns are solid and are fairly cheap at Walmart. They usually come in black, though. But wood isn't out of the question, either, though they'd probably be a little light.
Personally, I'd steer clear of any modern techniques of manufacturing for a one-off item for personal use, or for any item for a personal gift. Hand crafted items look much better, and are perceived as being a higher quality, especially with their flaws. That being said, if you were making these to sell at festivals or events, using a laser engraver would net the most profit.
For the cards, for a one-off item I'd definitely take the time to make my own. Get some card-stock, cut everything out by hand, hand paint it all, then distress it a little, but only with natural things like dirt and handling. Just sit and watch a couple of movies with dirty hands and play with all the cards, like shuffling and riffling.
Just a suggestion, as you are into D&D.
The PHB has a trinket that says "A pair of knucklebone dice, each with a skull symbol on the side that would normally show six pips" you now know how to make those authentically for your character.
What a timely video. I've just been working on my own Royal Game of Ur leather playing board!
I made my own royal game of ur out of wood pieces and put a draw into it to hold the dice and game pieces. My dice are blank d4's that were marked on the die like Irving Finkel uses. Because my character is Norse I used runes and the rosettes as the double roll squares.
I also made a pouch version of the scandinavian game: Hnefatafl (predates chess) - with the board as the board and wooden circles as the pieces.
For those who didn't see the video, he was referencing the rules of the game (like me, since I'm on my phone) you can go to the description under the video.
I've been inspired to start a project of my own. It's gonna be a drawstring pouch with three compartments. The idea is to keep dice, larp money, and real money separate. It'll also have an exterior pocket, a belt loop, and a key ring to hang another pouch or some keys
Post pictures!
I absolutely love the nine men’s morris board! I’ve been wanting to do a morris project and now I know how I’m going to do it!
Watching this now after watching the conquest videos is hilarious.
DARTS! The most basic of tavern games. Old style English darts would be a nice addition in a leather case
In real medieval inns, taverns and hospitals the gameboard was often carved into the tables (very roughly) also they liked drinking games and puzzle mugs.
Puzzle Mugs?
Hint for people making stencils out of plastic or cardstock - use Pixie Spray or Alene's Tack It Over And Over on the back. These are low-tack repositionable glues which can cover all the tiny areas of the stencil and makes them reusable.
I love nine man's morris. You can play it anywhere you can get paper, a pencil, and change for a dollar. (specifically 9 dimes and 10 pennies)
You mentioned an Irving Finkel video on Ur but I don't see the link? Were you talking about the one with Tom Scott and Irving Finkel?
Finkle! Great mention!
Could you make an ace up your sleeve gamblers holdout mechanisms for your next LARP character? Think it could suit the aesthetic 🤙
Love your videos
I thought for sure you were making Petteia on the leather. This game would also work and dates all the way back to ancient, Pre-Rome, Greece. But, it's a game of skill, not of chance. So I see in retrospect why this may not be a great choice for "tavern games". Still, if any of you reading this have never played it, look it up, it's fun and easy to make using the same instructions for the first game in this very video!
The more I play diablo 4, the more I want to get back into crafting medieval stuff. These tavern games would fit right in to that setting... omg.
@6:20 The Rogue in me would want to wrap those game pieces in extra material or an additional bag in order to be stealthy. I'd hate to be running and it sound like I have Tic Tac's in me pockets
You should make a leather card deck holder for your cards
A metal card tin since cards are important to that style of character they have a special place for their cards
Love this design! And BONUS! I get to learn about yet another historic board game; Nine Men's Morris :D
Thanks!
Thanks ST.
The leather nine mens morris pouch is a great idea. The only thing that stands out is you are missing 4 corner markers in the centre square
I make resin dice as a hobby and that's exactly how I ink the pips
If you want to be really accurate, I've been told that as gambling was forbidden in medieval times, they were using bone dices small enough so that you could swallow them easily.
Senet is my favorite, Ur is really fun too
Other cool games you could make is hounds and jackals from ancient Egypt and the game of odin's dice
I do love your enthusiasm and feel you must have been an actor in some life!! I'm making a wild west themed escape room scenario and think some of these games might make good props at the very least, added ambience. Thanks for the inspiration.
I love the leather board/pouch combo!! Doubles as a mimic coin pouch to confuse your average cutpurse 🤣
Parchesi is an ancient game. It came out of India I believe. It is like the Hasbro game of Trouble but just a little more sophisticated. It is larger so it might need to be rolled up and put in a tube with a latching cap and the game pieces and dice on the inside.
Hay for cards use thin wood like some people use for business card and your laser burner.
Nice!!! Love your episodes
Hey clever. I don’t mess with a cricket but a buddy of mine that does work with vinyl uses press and seal for Tupperware instead of transfer sheets. Says it works like a charm and is like $3 for 70 feet.
Bone dice- Necromancer who is also a gambler, his bone dice cam be his focus!!!
I know this might be a bit late, but to help keep the dice from getting marred-up, hit them with a coat of clear enamel paint.
I have a set of bone dominoes I bought from Townsends, they're really cool.
Can't wait to see these at a skill tree tavern at reckoning or something and I'm excited to see custom cards made
would love to come to conquest but it hit right where I'm going on holiday. So please make a video about your journey.
Irving finkle is awesome
I once made an Ur board out of lego. I used different colors to represent the different tiles and I used 1x1 cones and cylinder blocks for pieces. The only thing that wasnt lego were the dice which I just used 1d4 for and just said evens are pips, odd is no pip.
OMG! Yes!
Board games for the win!
Awesome game tutorial 😂❤❤❤❤❤❤
9 Man's Morris, or "Mill" as we used to call it growing up. An even easier approach would be to scratch or draw it or a tabletop and just use coins. Admittedly, that's not nearly as fancy. (We had a wooden game board and used checkers, but different coins would work just as well.)
You definitely have to make a cane to go with your character but I suggest you make a shillelagh(an Irish walking stick/club used by pub gents) or a larp safe one at least lol
Hi Clever, subscribed after watching Staff of the Wandererand binged your content, first time commenting. It always makes me laugh when you say you're cheap, then make something that looks expensive😂😂also, the tool you used is a bench holdfast. Looking forward to more excellent content. I would love to see your dogs reaction to finding his bones missing...I'm picturing him strapping on his armour muttering 'OK...bones missing...let's do this. The hunt is on!!!' 😂😂😂
I love how the cards came out! also does that grommet company make thinner grommets that you can use on fabric?
For fabric use eyelets. (Grommets and eyelets are basically the same thing but grommets are used for heavier materials and eyelets are used for lighter materials.) Any sewing or craft store should have eyelets. You can apply eyelets the same way as grommets with the hammer or you can use eyelet pliers.
Damn! Haven't played that game in years. I used to play it a lot with gramps but last time it was 15 years ago give ot take i think... It's great old game with literary 3 or 4 simple rules more or less. How the game turns out for you and your opponent depends on how you set your pieces so step 1: Drop pieces on board if done carefully can turn game around for you at the very beginning.
That tool you used to clamp your work piece to the table is called a hold fast in the blacksmith community
Was wondering why my eyelets weren't setting right. Thanks for that little bit there.