Welcome to our two-part review of Dice Throne Outcasts and Dice Throne Adventures. In Part I of this review, we’ll look closely at Dice Throne Outcasts and see what it has to offer. In Part II of our review, we’ll take Dice Throne Outcasts and use it to play the solo and cooperative Dice Throne Adventures Unchained Expansion!

The full Dice Throne Outcasts + Dice Throne Adventures Unchained set arrived at my house in mid November 2025! See above! This was on Kickstarter back in Oct 2024 (about a year) ago. It promised delivery in October 2025; I think they were trying VERY HARD to make Halloween, but they just missed by about two weeks. Two weeks late in Kickstarter terms is still very good!
What Is This?

Dice Throne, by itself, is a head-to-head Yahtzee battle dice game. Each player takes the role of some character, and goes into battle with another character/player! The two characters battle it out with dice (using a Yahtzee-style mechanism to activate powers)! It’s best played as a head-to-head game of character vs. character. There’s a TON of characters in different sets! We’ve seen the Marvel Dice Throne Set (which we discussed here), the X-Men Marvel Dice Thone Set (which we discussed here), and Dice Throne Seasons I and II (which we discussed here).

This set of Dice Throne is essentially the Halloween themed set: Dice Throne Outcasts! It has four characters inside! To be clear, you can JUST buy this and play the head-to-head game by itself; strictly speaking, you don’t need anything else to play Dice Throne if you just want this box! (If you want to play solo or cooperatively, however, you will need some more stuff: that’s what Part II of our review will discuss).

This box is gorgeous with the art of Manny Trembley. See above and below.


The side lists the four characters in the box.

And the bottom talks about what this is.

I gotta be honest, this cover is a contender for best cover of the year, especially the raven side.
Unboxing

The box top is actually a magnetic wrap-around board! Inside, you get a little cartoon intro to the characters! See above!

The box itself contains four trays, each with different cards and fold outs.

There are also some cardboard tokens which are perfectly fine (see right). You can also choose to get the acrylic tokens as an add-on; I really like how cool the Acrylic tokens are, but if you are on the fence on getting this game, the cardboard tokens in the box are JUST fine.

There is also a perfectly fine rulebook that comes with it. The rulebook also has pointers to videos to teach the game. I even referred to the rulebook a few times to remind myself how to play. After years and years and years, they have the rulebook down.

There are four characters in the game; they are easy to take out with their game trayz.
And that’s really all that’s in the box. The game is really contained in the characters, so let’s take a look at those.
The Characters

Over about a week, I was very excited to try this game, so I got a chance to play all the characters in various modes: head-to-head, solo, me vs. me, and cooperatively.
These characters are fantastically thematic. Each one of these is unique and dripping with flavor!
The Necromancer


The Necromancer uses corpses to summon undead fight for him!

The funnest to play overall was definitely the Necromancer! His components are just top notch, and the Undead that come out look so cool! The best part is that he has an ability called (I am not making this up) Corpse Explosion! When playing a big group, every time that ability was invoked, people either laughed or went “Ew!!” It was very funny.
The Raveness

The Raveness has a Raven which flies around and sucks energy from characters in slight attacks!

The Raveness feels more “subtle” than the other characters is some ways, as she has to get her Raven to the opponents! But the Raven simply “steals” life force and brings it back to her master! This is interesting because the Raven’s life steal is not an attack that can be defended. If played well, she can subtly funnel energy back to herself without provoking a Defense Roll! It was also very thematic to summon the Raven with feathers … I had a picture in my mind of a Raven forming up from the feathers and summoning it …
I like the subtlety of the Raveness.
Headless Horseman

The Headless Horseman throws his big pumkin head on baddies and has tokens to terrorize!

The Headless Horseman was fun to play, as you throw your giant Pumpkin Head on your opponents! It is a little harder to get the Headless Horseman going, but once he gets going, his pumpkin head is a sight to be seen!

His Terrorize tokens are really interesting, as they can be discarded to Terrorize your opponent with the pumpkin head!
I do think that the Headless Horseman may have my favorite art in this set.
Pale Lady

And finally the Pale Lady slips back-and-forth to lady and werewolf form!

My least favorite was the Pale Lady/Werewolf; not because she’s bad or anything. She’s weird because she HAS NO UPGRADES. (Normally, most Dice Throne characters can upgrade their board). I think the back-and-forth between the two sides (Pale Lady/Werewolf) was supposed to emulate some of the upgrades. She’s definitely a butt-kicker, especially with the bleed tokens she just spews out, but she seemed the least subtle. I guess that’s very thematic, since she is a werewolf!! GROWL!
The Characters Have Character

It might be trite to say, but the characters in Dice Throne Outcasts have character! Thematic character!
I still liked every character! The Necromancer might be the best one to give to newer players, not because he’s simplest, but because he’s so much fun! The Necromancer might really bring new players into the game … they just might need a little help to operate him.
Solo Mode: Me vs. Me

The base Dice Throne games have no solo mode … BUT you can play in Me vs Me mode, which is just the solo player playing both characters! I have done this Me vs Me mode for every single Dice Throne set I have gotten! It’s a great way to learn the characters at your own pace!

The solo player just jumps from one side of the table to the other, alternating play of each character! I recommend physically changing sides because it helps you “become” that character since it’s just in front of you! Yes, it’s slightly annoying to get up and go to the other side of the table every turn, but it really does help immerse you into the characters!

If you are curious who won with the Necromancer vs. The Headless Horseman … it was close, but the Headless Horseman won!
If you don’t have anyone to play against, and you don’t have any of the solo/co-op expansions, the Me vs. Me solo mode is a fine way to learn the characters. In fact, for this set, I played all the characters at least once so I could teach them. The characters in this set are a little complex, so it’s nice to have seen how the characters work for when your friends have questions.
Conclusion to Part I.

Many of you are aware that I generally really like mostly solo and cooperative games. Even though Dice Throne Outcasts is a base competitive game, I really liked it! The art was fantastic, and the characters were dripping with theme! In fact, I am a superhero guy, I and I think Dice Throne Outcasts is better than X-Men or Marvel Dice Throne! The characters are just so well-thought out and thematic!
If you just want a thematic horror-based battle game, Dice Throne Outcasts is fantastic: 9/10.
But if you want to play Dice Throne with a “real” solo mode or a cooperative mode, follow us in Part II as we explore Dice Throne Adventures Unchained …
Appendix: Silly House Rule

I also picked up the Dice Throne Outcasts Hero Sculpts (see above). These are for the cooperative game only.

They are just some neat little minis you can use on the board when you play Dice Throne Adventures. They are completely useless in the base game.

Or are they? We instituted a silly House Rule: the minis can be used as “worker placement” tokens to mark which ability you invoked with your dice!! Sometimes, your dice can match multiple abilities on your mat, and thisis just a way to denote which one you chose!! See above as the Raveness mini marks us use the “small straight” option instead of a different match.

Or above as the Raveness marks that we used Murder of Crows II.
This is an absolutely silly way to use the minis. But, it helps you feel like you got more for your money if you DID get them. Which I did.
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