Darts Cricket Scorer
Cricket darts scorer for 2 or more players tracking marks on 20 through 15 and bull, closed numbers, and points scored only on numbers your opponents haven't closed. Works offline.
Built by the AbraCalc team
How to play
- Enter 2 or more player names and tap Start Game.
- Pick single, double, or treble before tapping a number to match how the dart actually landed.
- Watch each number close after 3 marks; extra marks on numbers your opponents haven't closed add points.
- The game ends automatically once a player has closed every number and leads or ties on points — use Undo to fix any wrong tap.
Add your players, then tap a number on the grid every time a dart lands there, choosing single, double, or treble to match the hit. Three marks closes that number for you, shown as a filled circle, and any mark beyond the third only scores points if at least one opponent still has that number open — hit a number everyone has already closed and it's worth nothing. The points row updates live so you can see the spread at a glance, and the game only declares a winner once a player has closed all seven numbers (20 down to 15 plus bull) and their points are equal to or ahead of everyone else's. Undo pulls back the very last mark if a tap was a mistake, so you can keep entering darts as fast as they're thrown.
Frequently asked questions
- How many marks does it take to close a number in cricket darts?
- Exactly three marks close a number for a player, whether that comes from three separate single hits, one treble, or a single plus a double. Once closed, a filled circle shows on the grid for that player and number.
- When do extra marks actually score points?
- Only after you've closed a number yourself, and only if at least one opponent still has that same number open. If everyone at the board has already closed a number, hitting it again scores nothing for anyone, since there's no one left to take points from.
- How is this different from the Darts 501 Scorer tool?
- 501 is a countdown game where you subtract dart values from a starting score and must finish on a double. Cricket doesn't count down at all — it's about closing seven specific numbers (20 through 15 and bull) before your opponents and outscoring them on the numbers you've closed, so the two tools track completely different state and rules.