![Skew dice - d6](http://mathsgear.co.uk/cdn/shop/products/20170725_111706_medium.jpg?v=1500978069)
![Skew dice - d6](http://mathsgear.co.uk/cdn/shop/products/20170725_111726_medium.jpg?v=1500978130)
![Skew dice - d6](http://mathsgear.co.uk/cdn/shop/products/20180620_122338_medium.jpg?v=1529494520)
![Skew dice - d6](http://mathsgear.co.uk/cdn/shop/products/20210831_114831_medium.jpg?v=1630406994)
![Skew dice - d6](http://mathsgear.co.uk/cdn/shop/products/20230606_092838_medium.jpg?v=1686041779)
These 6 sided dice aren't regular cubes. The're oddly wonky. But amazingly they are totally fair. That's because they are isohedral, meaning every face can be mapped onto every other face through a symmetry of the object.
These objects have a handedness. Which is to say the mirror image of a dice is not the same as the dice! So here, you get a set of 2, the right-hand version and the left-hand version!
Also, check out the skew d12s.
Price = (the 139th prime number) pence = 797 pence = £7.97