First Rolls, Total Domination: Bloody Starrazor Dice Review

Hero photo of Die Hard Dice Bloody Starrazor set on wooden table with dramatic side light.
Bloody Starrazor by Die Hard Dice.

First Impressions: Blood on Mithril (But Make It Light)

The Starrazors hit with immediate visual impact: silver dice marbled with a bold crimson spatter — like a relic pulled from the aftermath of a monster slayer’s final stand. Given the look, I expected weight. Heft. The presence of metal dice that threaten to dent a table if rolled with enthusiasm.

“Light as a sunbeam dancing on the leaves.” — a description that turned out to be right on the money.

Instead, they’re shockingly light. Not cheap-light—intentional. That airy, mythril-inspired build makes them fast and fluid to roll, and the black inking keeps them highly readable at a glance.

The First Rolls (When the Dice Whisper: Use Me Wisely)

I always test-roll new sets before they see a session, and the Starrazors didn’t disappoint. A few practice tosses delivered the kind of results that make any DM or player pause and think: “Okay… I can’t waste these on trivial checks.” These are set-piece dice.

Nat 20! I can’t waste these rolls!
Tavern Prep.

Perfect Timing: Enter the Fireball Arc

Given their energy, the Starrazors won’t debut on a random Perception check. They’re stepping onto the stage to open the Fireball Arc of my Waterdeep: Dragon Heist campaign—where a single roll can shift momentum, reshape a scene, or set a legend in motion.

Scott’s Dice Bag — Quick Take

  • Vibe: Dramatic, dangerous, set-piece energy
  • Best For: Boss fights, pivotal checks, warlocks & blood hunters
  • Readability: Black ink on silver = excellent
  • Final Word: Gorgeous, light, and worthy of the spotlight

A Worthy Addition to the Hoard

  • Striking, blood-spattered silver finish
  • Surprisingly light and smooth in hand
  • Black inking keeps numbers crisp and readable
  • Early rolls felt dramatic and dependable

Have a favorite set I should test next? Drop it in the comments.