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OctoCraps is a single-player dice game that reimagines classic craps with eight-sided dice instead of the usual six. Developed by Pepperoni Network and released August 22, 2025, it’s a quick-play, luck-driven game for PC, Linux, and Mac. The twist lies in the dice: rolling an 8-sided die instead of two 6-sided ones changes probabilities and bet options. You place wagers before each roll, aiming to predict outcomes in a fast, chaotic way. It’s not about skill, it’s pure randomness with a quirky aesthetic. Ideal for short bursts, it’s a bold but simple take on a casino staple.
Each round starts with placing bets on a board with zones like “Field,” “Hard Eight,” or “Any Seven.” You roll two 8-sided dice, and payouts depend on where the total lands. The house edge is baked in, but high-risk bets like “Crap 1” (a roll of 1) offer massive rewards. A typical session lasts 5, 10 minutes, with rounds ending when you run out of chips or hit the table’s time limit. Controls are minimal: left-click to bet, right-click to cash out. The dice physics feel floaty, and animations are intentionally glitchy. You’ll second-guess probabilities constantly, but the chaos is the point. No strategy, just rapid decision-making and hope.
PlayPile users rate it 4.2 out of 5, with 78% completing the game. Average playtime is 3 hours, though 40% of players hit 10+ hours chasing high-score streaks. Community moods are split: 60% “excited,” 25% “confused,” and 15% “annoyed” by the steep learning curve. Critics praise its “bold” approach but note it’s “not for casual players.” The 35 achievements include “Bet on Everything” and “Lose 100 Consecutive Rolls,” incentivizing grinding. Some call it “addictive in the worst way,” while others say it “feels like a casino demo with no payout.” Completionists love the challenge, but the math-heavy rules turn off newcomers.
OctoCraps is a niche gamble. Priced at $19.99, it’s cheap but demands patience for its complex odds. If you’re a stats nerd or a craps veteran, the 8-sided twist adds fresh tension. The 3-hour average playtime means it’s over quickly for most, but the 15% “annoyed” rating warns it’s easy to burn through cash. With 35 achievements and a completion rate of 78%, it’s a grindy pick for completionists. Skip it if you hate probability puzzles, but grab it if you want a chaotic, short-lived dice experiment. Worth the price for the thrill-seekers.
Game Modes
Single player
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