Board Game Project
Description
How many times has this happened to you? It is a rainy Sunday afternoon, there is nothing on TV, and you decide to play a board game with the family. You go to the closet and get out the Monopoly® game, only to find that the die is missing (note: die is the singular for dice). Wouldn’t it be great to have a simple electronic device to replace all the dice that have gone missing? Well, after you complete this project, that’s exactly what you will have. In this project you will assemble and test a Board Game Counter kit that randomly displays a number between one and six in the patterns typically seen on board game die.
Conclusion Questions
Tally Number:
1 - 17 tallies
2 - 16 tallies
3 - 19 tallies
4- 14 tallies
5 - 18 tallies
6 - 14 tallies
7 - 2 tallies
1. According to my results, my game board is not fair. The smallest number rolled was two and the highest was nineteen. My device seems to like ending on the number three.
2. The term "debugging" originally came from a young student at Harvard named Armiral Grace Hopper. She was fixing a computer when her colleagues pointed out a moth stuck inside a piece of their technology. As the kids struggled to get the critter to safety, Hopper joked and came up with a word for their activity. This term was "debugging".
1 - 17 tallies
2 - 16 tallies
3 - 19 tallies
4- 14 tallies
5 - 18 tallies
6 - 14 tallies
7 - 2 tallies
1. According to my results, my game board is not fair. The smallest number rolled was two and the highest was nineteen. My device seems to like ending on the number three.
2. The term "debugging" originally came from a young student at Harvard named Armiral Grace Hopper. She was fixing a computer when her colleagues pointed out a moth stuck inside a piece of their technology. As the kids struggled to get the critter to safety, Hopper joked and came up with a word for their activity. This term was "debugging".