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YAHTZEE With Buddies Dice Game
Scopely
Rating 4.0star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
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3.8

One-line summary YAHTZEE With Buddies is easy to recommend for players who want a lively, feature-packed digital Yahtzee with real social hooks, but I'd hesitate if you want a clean, distraction-free dice game without ads, nudges, and occasional freezes.

  • Installs

    10M+

  • Developer

    Scopely

  • Category

    Board

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    8.15.2

  • Package

    com.scopely.yux

In-depth review
YAHTZEE With Buddies Dice Game takes a very simple tabletop classic and turns it into something much bigger, noisier, and more mobile-native. After spending time with it, my biggest takeaway is this: the core Yahtzee gameplay still works beautifully on a phone, but Scopely has wrapped that core in a thick layer of events, rewards, social systems, cosmetics, and monetization. Whether that sounds exciting or exhausting will determine how much you enjoy it. At its best, this is a genuinely fun way to play Yahtzee whenever you have a few spare minutes. The basic act of rolling dice, chasing combinations, and deciding whether to play safe or gamble for a bigger score still has the same tension that made the original game endure. On mobile, that translates well. Matches are easy to read, turns are quick, and it is very convenient to have several games going at once instead of waiting around on one board. I found that this structure suits the game especially well: you can pop in, take a few turns across multiple matches, collect a couple of rewards, and leave without feeling tied down. That flexibility is one of the app's strongest qualities. It works both as a casual background game and as something you can sink more time into. There are plenty of modes and side activities, so if you get bored of straightforward head-to-head play, there is almost always another event, tournament, challenge, or mini-objective waiting. For some players, that variety will be a huge plus. The app rarely feels empty. There is movement everywhere, and it creates the sense that the game is alive rather than just a static digital board game. I also liked the social side more than I expected to. Playing against friends and family is the obvious appeal, but even beyond that, the app leans into community with in-game groups, chat features, and cooperative or competitive events. If you enjoy checking in with a group, trading encouragement, and chasing shared rewards, this adds a layer that a plain solo dice app simply cannot match. It gives the game a rhythm that keeps it in your rotation longer than a bare-bones adaptation probably would. The presentation helps too. YAHTZEE With Buddies is colorful, energetic, and constantly refreshed with themed visuals, unlockable dice designs, boards, and profile flourishes. It clearly wants to feel like a service game rather than just a digital rulebook. Even when the screen gets busy, there is a sense of polish in the look and personality of the app. It is trying hard to make routine dice rolls feel rewarding, and sometimes that works surprisingly well. But there is another side to that ambition. My biggest complaint is that the app often feels overstuffed. If you came here wanting a clean, classic Yahtzee experience, the sheer number of menus, currencies, events, pop-ups, and reward tracks can be tiring. There were moments when I wanted to simply play Yahtzee, and the app instead pushed me through one more claim screen, one more event notice, or one more reminder about something I could enter, collect, or buy. The game can start to feel less like a board game and more like a machine designed to keep your attention spinning. Ads and monetization are the second major friction point. The app is free, and it behaves like it. There are enough bonuses and freebies to keep non-paying players active, but premium dice rolls, extra chances, and various nudges are never far away. None of that completely ruins the experience, but it does affect the tone. Instead of the calm, mathematical pleasure of dice strategy, you sometimes get the sensation of being ushered toward the next shortcut or refill. If you are sensitive to free-to-play pressure, you will notice it. The third issue is technical smoothness. In day-to-day use, the app is mostly playable, but it is not always seamless. I ran into occasional freezing and awkward transitions, especially when moving between the home screen and side modes or after ad-related interruptions. These were not constant enough to make the app unusable, but they were frequent enough to be annoying, and they chip away at the otherwise polished feel. So who is this for? It is for people who already like Yahtzee and want a version with more energy, more modes, and more reasons to keep checking in. It is also a good fit for social players who enjoy asynchronous matches and group-oriented features. If your ideal mobile game is something you can revisit all day in short bursts, this does that very well. Who is it not for? If you want a minimalist, faithful, low-noise Yahtzee app, this is probably too busy. If ads, event clutter, and premium nudges annoy you quickly, the app's design will wear on you. And if technical hiccups are a deal-breaker, the occasional freeze may push you away. In the end, YAHTZEE With Buddies succeeds because the underlying game is timeless and the app gives it a lot of momentum. When everything clicks, it is entertaining, social, and easy to keep coming back to. But it also asks you to accept the baggage of a modern free-to-play mobile game. I enjoyed it most when I embraced it as a lively, slightly chaotic service version of Yahtzee rather than expecting a quiet digital board game. If that sounds like your kind of compromise, there is a lot here to like.