First Rolls, Total Domination: Bloody Starrazor Dice Review
There’s a particular magic to opening a new set of dice. Some folks call it superstition. I call it ritual. And when the Bloody Starrazor set from Die Hard Dice arrived at my door, that ritual felt downright ceremonial.
Note: I purchased this set myself, and this review comes from my own table experience. Die Hard Dice did not sponsor, approve, or endorse this review—I’m simply linking to their storefront for readers who’d like to learn more.
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.


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.
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.







