I would also consider "TOUT" instead of "NIMP", the meaning of "tout" is "all" (as in "all results are valid") which is slightly different from "any", but "nimp" while more accurate also has a strange connotation especially in its abbreviated form – you can use it to describe something silly... for example, if someone was behaving in a comical/random way, you could say "elle fait nimp" (hard to translate literally, but close to "she's doing random things"). "TOUT" doesn't have that connotation and in this context would be clearly understood.
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Looks good!
One last thing, I don't understand why the backgammon die says "_HAUT"... I can't find what it's even trying to translate, neither in the backgammon rules nor in the englishe version of Dicier. I don't even know how to play backgammon, so this might make sense to players, I just thought I'd mention it because it seems strange to me.
It's meant to be up/top, as in 'this side facing up', but I did it by google translate because it's a new feature in v1.1 and so it wasn't in the original translations list (and unfortunately I didn't get suggestions when I asked about it elsewhere). Whatever the word is, it has to be 5 characters or less.
(The doubling cube's a record of the size of the current game's wager, and it's turned up to the next-higher side (so 2-4-8...) when the wager's doubled.)
I guess "haut" works, it's just a bit strange. There is no better word that's 5 letters or less to say 'this side facing up' that I can think of.
You could use "MISE", which means wager. It's slightly awkward because ideally it'd be MISE_2, MISE_4 etc. but it's more explicit, I think personally I'd be less confused.
You could also use "PTS", a common abbreviation for points, which would be easy to understand and be closer to natural language, but is more generic than 'mise'.
Hope this helps!