The Devil You Know: A Review of Dispel Dice âDevil You Knowâ
The Devil You Know Dice set by Dispel Dice didnât arrive quietly. They arrived on game night and immediately turned into a full table-side unboxing led by my son and his friends. The reaction?
Oohs. Ahhs. That quiet kind of reverence you only get when something genuinely beautiful hits the table.
Labyrinth, Power Glove, Exsanguinated, and Devil You Know sets

Note: This set was provided by Dispel Dice for review purposes. No editorial direction or requirements were given, and all opinions below reflect my own table experience.
Some dice arrive quietly. Others arrive like an event.
The Devil You Know set from Dispel Dice arrived on game night and immediately became the center of attention. Before I even had the chance to properly open the package myself, my son had gathered a crowd of kids around the dining room table for what quickly became an impromptu unboxing ceremony complete with oohs, aahs, and the kind of reverent excitement usually reserved for legendary loot drops.
And honestly? The reaction was justified.
Packaging Worthy of a Relic
Dispel Dice continues to understand something many luxury dice makers chase but never fully capture: presentation matters.
The Devil You Know set arrives housed in a jewel box nestled inside a slip case, and the entire experience feels less like opening a gaming accessory and more like unveiling a dangerous family heirloom that should perhaps remain sealed away. The packaging communicates immediately that this is not a casual pickup or impulse buy. It feels ceremonial.
That sense of danger carries directly into the dice themselves.
Sharp Enough to Draw Blood
These are resin dice, but not the soft-edged, rounded resin many players are used to.
These are sharp.
Not âsharp-edgedâ in the marketing sense. I mean genuinely sharpâto the point that Dispel Dice includes a warning in the packaging acknowledging it. The edges and points feel almost predatory in hand, and that physical sensation becomes part of the setâs personality.
Visually, the dice are stunning. Deep blood-red resin swirled with dark black veining gives them the appearance of carved gemstones or crystallized drops of forbidden candy. They look delicious in the same way a vampireâs smile looks inviting right before everything goes terribly wrong.
And thatâs exactly why they work.
Dice With Teeth
The Devil You Know set radiates gothic horror energy.
The blood-red coloration, black marbling, and jagged geometry immediately evoke vampires, cursed nobility, candlelit crypts, and whispered bargains made at midnight. These are not heroic fantasy dice. These are manipulative court intrigue dice. Seduction-and-murder dice. âThe castle doors close behind youâ dice.
The set feels tailor-made for a campaign like Curse of Strahd or any noir-inspired horror setting where danger is elegant instead of monstrous.
Even the rolling experience contributes to that identity. Despite their aggressive geometry, the dice roll effortlessly and gracefully across the table. The sound they make is deeply satisfyingâlight enough not to slam through the tray, but sharp enough to command attention when they land.
And somehow, despite the chaos of their design, readability remains excellent. We had no difficulty reading results in any lighting conditions during play.
Not Your Traditional Arsenal
One of the most interesting aspects of the set is that this is not a traditional RPG dice lineup.
Instead of the standard seven-die arrangement, Devil You Know includes:
- a d2
- two d4s
- three d6s
- a d12
Notably absent are the d8, d10, percentile die, and d20.
That unusual configuration immediately changes how the set feels at the table. These arenât âall-purpose adventuring dice.â They feel specializedâalmost ritualistic. Like a set intended for specific moments rather than everyday use.
The standout piece for me was the d2.
I had genuinely never seen one before. Itâs effectively a coin-style die marked with 1 and 2, but in the context of this set it felt strange, novel, and immediately memorable. It became an instant conversation piece the moment the box opened.
That said, the missing d20 is also the primary reason this set hasnât become a daily driver for me. As beautiful as these dice are, they function best as a thematic companion piece or specialty set rather than a universal toolkit.
Clover Claimed Them Immediately
The dice saw play the very night they were opened.
My son immediately claimed them for Clover during our ongoing Waterdeep campaign, and the set instantly felt dramatic at the table. Part of that comes from the unusual shapes, but part of it is harder to explain. These dice feel unpredictable. Chaotic. Slightly malicious in the best possible way.
They never produced a campaign-defining natural 20 or catastrophic failure that evening, but they didnât need to.
Some dice create memories through statistics.
Others create atmosphere the moment they hit the table.
These belong firmly in the second category.
Final Verdict
The Devil You Know set from Dispel Dice is gorgeous, dangerous, theatrical, and unapologetically niche.
The nontraditional die selection means it likely wonât replace your everyday gaming set, but that also isnât the point. These dice are built for mood, tension, and presence. Theyâre props as much as toolsâobjects that help reinforce the tone of darker campaigns before a single word of narration is spoken.
They demand respect.
And if you donât give it to them, they feel like the kind of dice that just might bite.
These dice are for darker campaigns where attitude and chaos are prominent; they demand respect and should be feared lest they turn on you and bite.






