October 15, 2025
Description
This Canadian board game was first marketed in 1940 by the Copp Clark Publishing Company of Toronto.
Rummoli requires the use of Poker chips. When played on a flat board or sheet, the chips tend to slide around, get mixed into the wrong pot, and are difficult to pick up. This 3D version has pots for the chips to prevent mixing and making it easier to collect your winnings.
Rummoli is an easy, family friendly game. See attached rules to learn how to play.
When printing, be sure to insert colour changes for the lettering at 20.2mm. On the Poker Pot and 7-8-9 pot you'll need two colour changes, at 20.2mm and at 21.2mm (Poker Pot is Red/Black, 7-8-9 is Black/Red). You may want to use variable layer heights to get the bottom of the pot smooth. See the included .3mf files to help with slicing but they are for a dual-head XL.
If you have a mult-colour printer, the Chips-R.stl and R.stl should be opened together (same with Box Top.stl and rummoli.stl). I've included a simple disc for plain chips.
If you want to iron the top of the letters (it takes too long to do the whole top surface), add a Range from 20.50mm to 23mm and turn on ironing for just that range. After you get the first piece sliced and gcode saved you can just right-click on the piece and use “Replace with STL” for each of the other pieces to save you resetting the colour changes (you may need to click “Arrange” to re-centre).
There are two versions of the storage box, one has space for chips and 4 extra ‘player pots’ (for keeping your chips during play). The ‘UC’ (Ultra Compact) box is smaller with no space for chips or extra pots (you can always play using coins, of course).
This is a ‘travel version’ that fits neatly into a small box about 4 inches cubed. If you'd prefer a full sized version for regular poker chips, check here: https://www.printables.com/model/323504-rummoli-card-game
Centre Pot and Centre Filler only fit together one way.
License:
Creative Commons — Attribution