I don't understand why it has to be so large... surely you can read braille that's smaller than that?
When I have asked Haley about it they need things bigger to easily read them. Also you would want bigger so that when the blind person is trying to read the die it will be easy to make it hold still. too small and the act of tying to read it would knock it over ruining the result.
Also you need to be able to find your dice after you roll them. Easier with larger dice.
and besides: large dice are cool.
Naah, that's not a problem if you roll them in a box or something like that (which you kinda have to since it's hard to judge where you can and can't roll as a blind person)
EDIT: By that I don't mean having a shoebox and rolling the dice in that, but more like the cup you get in some games to "roll" the dice in and then put that on the table and lift it to reveal the dice.
i also assume larger dice are less likely to be moved when you're feeling around for them
You don't have to feel for them much if you're using the above mentioned method.
I don't understand why it has to be so large... surely you can read braille that's smaller than that?
When I have asked Haley about it they need things bigger to easily read them. Also you would want bigger so that when the blind person is trying to read the die it will be easy to make it hold still. too small and the act of tying to read it would knock it over ruining the result.
Sure, but if they remove the non-braille numbers and instead just paint those on, they could make it alot smaller.
yes but that does not deal with the fact it needs to be big enough for blind people need to be able to tough the die with out ruining what was rolled.
See above answer.