To have the results mailed to addresses other than your own, just put reply-to: or replies-to: followed by the email addresses.
Here is an example of a dice servier email
War at Sea turn 1 Mediterranean Axis LBA attack Repulse [d6] damage Repulse [d6] attack Ramillies [d6] damage Ramillies [d6] attack Revenge [d6] damage Revenge [d6] replies-to: admiral_chipper@example.com my-opponent@example.orgThe reply from this request will look like this:
War at Sea turn 1 Mediterranean Axis LBA attack Repulse [2] damage Repulse [2] attack Ramillies [5] damage Ramillies [1] attack Revenge [4] damage Revenge [6] replies-to: admiral_chipper@example.com my-opponent@example.org
The dice specs can look like this: [2x3d6+4]. This means 2 separate rolls of 3 6-sided dice, with 4 added to each roll. The 2x is optional, with 1x (a single roll) being the default. The 3 is optional, again, the default is 1. The +4 is optional, with a default of 0. It is necessary to have d followed by 4, 6, 8, 12 or 20.
There can be only one [] containing dice specs per line
You may not use the characters "[" or "]" other than in dice specs.
A D&D Character, the way we used to roll them: Str: [3d6] Int: [3d6] Wis: [3d6] Dex: [3d6] Con: [3d6] Chr: [3d6] Hit points: [d8] Roll some random dice just to demonstrate the syntax: [d4 2d4 d6+3 2d20-3 3xd12]Here is what comes back:
A D&D Character, the way we used to roll them: Str: [11] Int: [13] Wis: [9] Dex: [10] Con: [14] Chr: [11] Hit points: [1] --Roll some random dice just to demonstrate the syntax: [2 4 5 26 8 1 12]Ouch, that guy is toast. I hope you have better luck than that!