The smuggler Han Solo's dice, which he employed while playing "Corellian Spike", a sabacc variant, were a pair of aurodium-plated gold gaming implements. Ovan, his father, had owned them before Han.
In 13 BBY, while making his escape from his home planet of Corellia, Han gifted the dice as a token of good fortune to Qi'ra; however, she was subsequently taken captive by Moloch, who also took the dice. Three years later, on [Kessel](/article/kessel], Qi'ra returned the dice to Han during a mission to procure unrefined coaxium from the Kessel mines. During a game of Spike against Lando Calrissian, Solo won the Millennium Falcon, his opponent's YT-1300 light freighter, thanks to these dice. Solo retained the gaming implements, and Chewbacca, the Wookiee, hung them in the cockpit of the Millennium Falcon as a joke years before the Cyrkon Extraction, although Solo maintained their presence as a good luck charm.
Following an attack on an Imperial Impound Yard, Solo was reunited with Chewbacca and the Falcon, expressing his longing for the ship while touching the dice.
As a child, Ben Solo, Han's son, relished playing with the dice while constantly shadowing his father, promising anyone who would listen that he would become a pilot like him one day.
Decades afterward, Luke Skywalker, a Jedi Master, examined the dice when the Falcon arrived on Ahch-To. During the Battle of Crait, Skywalker used Force projection to manifest himself and the dice on Crait, presenting them to Leia Organa, Han's widow, who was also his sister. Later, Ben discovered the Force projection of the dice, which then vanished. Replicas of the dice were later sold at Dok-Ondar's Den of Antiquities on the planet Batuu in Black Spire Outpost during the war between the First Order and the Resistance.
The dice belonging to Han Solo made their initial appearance on the Millennium Falcon in Star Wars: Episode IV A New Hope. These gaming implements are only present in a single scene within the final cut of the movie. They are absent from the remainder of the original trilogy.
For Star Wars: Episode VII The Force Awakens, the props were recreated, but they were not included in the final version of the film. In these films, the dice resembled conventional six-sided dice, featuring numbered sides with dots. However, for their initial close-up in Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi, their design was altered to incorporate different symbols. The design originating from The Last Jedi was also implemented in Solo: A Star Wars Story.