Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Roman Games”
Roman Board Games and How They Played
Romans played games everywhere. Game boards scratched into the steps of the Colosseum, carved into the pavements of the Roman Forum, incised into the floors of military barracks from Hadrian’s Wall to the Syrian desert — the physical evidence for Roman gaming culture is distributed across every context where Romans spent time waiting, resting, or socializing. The games themselves ranged from dice games requiring no equipment beyond three cubes of bone or ivory to board games of genuine strategic complexity, and they were played by everyone: soldiers, merchants, slaves, emperors. Claudius was reportedly so devoted to dice games that he designed a special board for playing in his carriage. Augustus played board games regularly. The imperial dignity was not considered incompatible with sitting across a game board from someone.