Contact
Reaching the right resource matters more than reaching fast. This page explains how to contact Dice Game Authority, what kinds of questions get a response, how long that typically takes, and what the site does and does not cover geographically. Whether the question is about dice game rules, a regional variation that doesn't appear anywhere on the site, or a correction to existing content, the details below should point toward the right path.
Response expectations
Dice Game Authority operates as a reference publication, not a customer service desk — which shapes what a realistic response looks like. Editorial inquiries (factual corrections, missing topics, sourcing questions) receive priority handling, typically within 3 to 5 business days. General questions about dice game content — probability questions, rule clarifications, terminology disputes — are read and considered, though not every message receives an individual reply.
Messages that fall outside the site's scope get the shortest responses, because the honest answer is usually a redirect. A few categories that consistently fall outside scope:
- Gambling advice or wagering recommendations — the site covers dice game odds and house edge as reference material, not as a tool for betting decisions.
- Legal counsel — questions about the legal status of dice games by state are answered at the reference level; state-specific legal advice requires a licensed attorney in that jurisdiction.
- Product sales or retailer recommendations — dice materials and construction and how to choose dice are covered editorially, but the site does not sell or specifically endorse retail vendors.
- App or software support — coverage of dice game apps and online dice games is editorial; technical support for third-party platforms belongs with those platforms directly.
The distinction worth drawing is between content questions (what does this site say, and is it accurate?) and service questions (fix something for me, recommend something for me). The first category is genuinely welcome. The second is outside what a reference publication can responsibly deliver.
Additional contact options
For topics already covered on the site, the Dice Game FAQ resolves the majority of common questions without any back-and-forth. The how it works page clarifies the site's scope and methodology. For rule disputes specifically — a common source of messages — dice game rule disputes walks through how ambiguous situations are typically adjudicated across game traditions.
Corrections and factual disputes are the highest-value messages this editorial team receives. If a page contains a date, a rule description, a named source, or a probability figure that appears to be wrong, a message with the specific page URL, the specific claim, and a named public source for the correction will move quickly through review. Vague "I think this is wrong" messages without a sourced alternative rarely produce a content change, not because the concern isn't taken seriously, but because editorial standards require a verifiable basis for revision.
Researchers, journalists, and educators with questions about dice game history, dice game world records, dice games in American culture, or tournament formats are encouraged to reach out with specific questions. Those inquiries are treated as editorial correspondence and typically receive a more detailed response than general audience messages.
How to reach this office
The primary contact method is email, routed through the site's editorial inbox. Response volume means that speculative, open-ended, or multi-part messages without a clear question may not receive individual replies. A well-formed message — specific page, specific question, specific context — receives a faster and more useful response than a general inquiry.
Social channels associated with Dice Game Authority are monitored but not the preferred route for detailed questions. Brief observations, link corrections, and quick factual flags are well-suited to social; anything requiring a substantive response should come through email.
There is no phone line. There is no live chat. The publication does not hold office hours. This is not a deficiency — it's the structure of a reference-grade editorial operation that prioritizes accuracy over speed.
Service area covered
Dice Game Authority covers dice games as practiced across the United States, with particular depth in formats that have documented regional variation. The dice game variations by region page maps how games like Street Craps, Farkle, and Bunco diverge in rules and scoring conventions across different parts of the country. Street dice games, casino dice games, classic dice games, and tabletop RPG dice games each receive dedicated coverage calibrated to how those formats actually function in American play contexts.
International rules and regional conventions outside the US are referenced where they bear directly on American game traditions — the history of dice games necessarily spans centuries and continents — but the site does not claim comprehensive coverage of non-US regulatory environments or game law. A message asking about the legal status of a dice game in a specific European jurisdiction, for instance, sits outside the scope this site can answer reliably.
Content addressing responsible gambling and dice games, bankroll management, and dice game legal status by state is US-specific by design, because the legal and social frameworks vary enough between countries that treating them as interchangeable would produce genuinely misleading information. The site covers 50 US states for legal status reference; territorial and tribal gaming contexts are noted where documented but do not receive the same depth of coverage as state-level frameworks.
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