Yahtzee
Standard Play
Objective of the Game
Yahtzee can be played either versus the computer or versus other players. When playing against the computer,
immediately after each of your moves the computer makes its move and displays its rolls for you to see what it rolled
and what it decided to keep. Against other players, their rolls and final decisions are displayed on your screen.
The game consists of 13 rounds. In each round, you roll the dice and then score the roll in one of 13 categories. You must score once in each category -- which means that towards the end of the game you may have to settle for scoring zero in some categories. The score is determined by a different rule for each category; see the section on Scoring below.
The object of the game is to maximize your total score. The game ends once all 13 categories have been scored.
Rolling the Dice
You have five dice which you can roll, represented by the die faces to the right of the scorecard. For your first
roll, the dice are automatically rolled for you. You can select individual dice to keep by clicking on the die.
A red rectangle appears around the die to indicate that this die will not be rerolled. Once you have selected
the dice you wish to keep, click the reroll button and the unselected dice will be rerolled.
You can roll the dice a total of three times -- the initial roll (in which you must roll all the dice), plus two re-rolls of any or all dice. After rolling three times, you must score the roll in one of the 13 initial categories.
Once you've scored the roll, you roll all the dice again and repeat the process. You continue until all 13 categories have been filled, at which time the game is over.
Scoring
Once you have the dice face combination you want to score, you score the roll in one of the 13 categories.
You do this by selecting one of the categories from the drop-down box. Only free categories are listed in
the drop-down. Once a category has been scored, it is closed out for the rest of the game; you cannot
change a category's score once it's been set. Each category defines its own scoring rules, as described below.
Upper Scores
In the upper scores, you total only the dice that match the category. For example, if you roll 2 2 4 3 4 and
save the dice in:
- twos, you get 4 points.
- threes, you get 3 points.
- fours, you get 8 points.
- aces, fives, or sixes, you get 0 points.
When the game is over, if you score 63 or more upper points (an average of 3 die faces per category), you will get an upper bonus of 35 points. Of course do don't need to score exactly three die faces in each upper category to get the bonus, as long as the upper total is at least 63.
Lower Scores
In the lower scores, you score either a set amount (defined by the category), or zero if you don't satisfy the category requirements.
3 and 4 of a Kind
For 3 of a Kind, you must have at least three of the same die faces. If so, you total all the die faces and score that total. Similarly for 4 of a Kind, except that you must have 4 of the 5 die faces the same.
Straights
Like in poker, a straight is a sequence of consecutive die faces; a small straight is 4 consecutive faces, and a large straight is 5 consecutive faces. Small straights score 30 points and large straights score 40 points.
Full House
Again as in poker, a Full House is a roll where you have both a 3 of a kind, and a pair. Full houses score 25 points.
Yahtzee
A Yahtzee is a 5 of a Kind (i.e. all the die faces are the same), and it scores 50 points. If you roll more than one Yahtzee in a single game, you will earn a 100 point bonus for each additional Yahtzee roll, provided that you have already scored a 50 in the Yahtzee category. If you have not scored in the Yahtzee category, you will not receive a bonus. If you have scored a zero in the Yahtzee category, you cannot receive any bonuses during the current game.
You can also use subsequent Yahtzee's as jokers in the lower scores section, provided the following criteria have been satisfied:
- You have scored a zero or 50 in the Yahtzee category.
- You have filled the corresponding category in the upper scores section.
If this is the case, you can use the Yahtzee as a joker to fill in any lower scores category. You score the category as normal. Thus for the Small Straight, Large Straight, and Full House categories, you would score 30, 40, and 25 points respectively. For the 3 of a Kind, 4 of a Kind, and Chance categories, you would score the total of the die face.
Chance
Chance is the catch-all roll. You can roll anything and you simply total all the die faces values.
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