Dart Game Encyclopedia
Showing 15 of 157 dart game variants with rules, scoring, and strategy
901
Marathon X01 format where endurance and scoring consistency are critical. Popular in team events.
1001
Extended X01 format favored by advanced players for training or team competitions.
1101
Rare X01 variant found primarily on electronic dartboard systems.
1501
Longest standard X01 variant, reserved for expert-level team formats and marathon events.
All Numbers Cricket
Every number 1-20 plus bullseye must be closed. Marathon cricket variant requiring full board proficiency.
Spanish Cricket
Targets include numbers 11-20 plus bullseye (11 numbers to close), requiring broader board coverage.
Minnesota Cricket
Standard cricket plus doubles, trebles, and three-in-a-bed as separate closing categories.
180 Around the Clock
Three darts at each number 1-20. Singles count as 1, doubles as 2, trebles as 3. Named after the maximum 180 score.
Bullseye Baseball
Baseball variant where you must hit bullseye each inning before runs count.
Tennis Darts
Full tennis scoring with service games, sets, and tiebreaks on the dartboard.
Battleship Darts
Secretly place fleet on dartboard segments. Throw darts to locate and sink opponent's ships. Strategic guessing game.
Grand National
Horse race themed. Race anticlockwise twice around the board with hurdles at certain numbers. Handicaps can be applied.
Aces
Tennis-style service game. Bullseye counts as an ace. Complex scoring system mirrors tennis matches.
DOLF
Golf-like dart game using all 20 segments as holes. Invented September 1, 1999 by Keith and Mike Meyer. Regulated by the World Dolf Federation (WDFF).
Golf Darts
Generic golf-darts format with 9 or 18 holes. Double ring = 1 stroke, treble = 2, miss = 5. Lowest total wins.