Perudo
Liar's Dice, a.k.a. Bluff, Perudo or Dudo, is a South American dice game in which each player is given five dice and cup to roll and hide them with. Players make successively higher declarations regarding the results of all the dice remaining in the game, e.g. "there are ten sixes". However, someone can always contest the bid. When that happens, all the dice are revealed and either the bidder or the caller loses dice, depending on who was correct. The last player with dice is the winner.
As a public domain dice game, there are a number of variants or similar games called Liar's Dice. This includes one that is often played with Poker Dice, and differs from the marketed versions in that players only declare on their own hand's value (as opposed to all dice being in play), using poker-hand values.
| Ages: | 8+ |
| NoOfPlayers: | 2-10 Players |
| PlayTime: | 15-30 Minutes |
| Playing Time : | Under 30 Minutes |
| BGG Link: | BGG Link |
| Game Type: | Family Games | Party Games |
| Game Categories: | Bluffing | Children's Game | Dice | Movies / TV / Radio theme | Party Game |
| Game Mechanisms: | Betting and Bluffing | Dice Rolling | Player Elimination |
| Game Family: | Brands: Disney | Components: Dice Cup / Dice Tower / Dice Tray | Components: Dice with Icons | Containers: Drawstring Bag | Containers: Tin/Metal Box | Digital Implementations: Board Game Arena |
| Game Designer(s): | Richard Borg |
| Game Artist(s): | Rita Åse | Bildgården AB | Design Edge | Wanjin Gill | H.P. Hoff | Martin Lodewijk |
| BGG Rank Overall: | 852 |
| BGG Weight: | 1.25 |
| BGG Weight Filter: | <2 |
Liar's Dice, a.k.a. Bluff, Perudo or Dudo, is a South American dice game in which each player is given five dice and cup to roll and hide them with. Players make successively higher declarations regarding the results of all the dice remaining in the game, e.g. "there are ten sixes". However, someone can always contest the bid. When that happens, all the dice are revealed and either the bidder or the caller loses dice, depending on who was correct. The last player with dice is the winner.
As a public domain dice game, there are a number of variants or similar games called Liar's Dice. This includes one that is often played with Poker Dice, and differs from the marketed versions in that players only declare on their own hand's value (as opposed to all dice being in play), using poker-hand values.
