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Christmas Cheer Entertainment Games

Favorite Games at Holiday Parties? 87

An anonymous reader asks: "Somehow, I got volunteered to take care of activities for the adults at my company's holiday party. For those of you who actually go to parties, what games have you played that were a lot of fun both for the geek and just the average person?"
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Favorite Games at Holiday Parties?

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  • booze (Score:3, Interesting)

    by E1v!$ ( 267945 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @06:36PM (#7673857) Homepage
    if there's alcohol, a good game for later would be twister.
  • Mafia!!! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jatbrowne ( 182386 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @06:48PM (#7674017)

    The greatest party game in the world... I'm sure everyone has one tho... It involves logic and psychological games and I think it is great for geeks.

    It works best with more than 5 people people - so lets say you have 8. Take 8 slips of paper, write the letter "M" on three of them and "C" on five. The "M"s are mafia and the "C"s are citizens.

    Then, on instruction (choose a games-master for this), everyone closes their eyes and when the games-master says "mafia open your eyes", the mafia do just that and see eachother. Everyone then closes their eyes, and then everyone opens their eyes at the same time. The object of this is that the mafia know who is a citizen and who is not, and that the citizens have no idea and consequently live in fear.

    Then the game begins. People talk and interrogate eachother until someone announces they beleive that someone else is mafia. They can then call a vote to "kill-off" that person, and if the vote is carried he/she is out of the game and they have to reveal whether or not they were mafia. The object of the game for the mafia is to kill all the citizens, and for the citizens it is to stay alive until all the mafia are dead.

    Give it a go - it really works. Lots of tension builds up and all sorts of weird mind-games happen....

  • by space_biker ( 229319 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @06:48PM (#7674019) Homepage
    This game's pretty fun:
    Give each person a piece of paper.
    Everyone writes a name, folds it over so no one can read it, and passes it to the person next to them.
    Then everyone writes an activity, folds it over, passes it on...
    continue with a place, a time, a reason...

    Then we read each one out to everyone. It gets pretty silly after you've done it a couple of times. Even geeks can have fun with it.
  • by travail_jgd ( 80602 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @06:49PM (#7674034)
    Are you making activities for a holiday party, or a company pep rally?

    If it's the former, let all the "games" be optional. The holidays are stressful enough with vacations, shopping, planning, etc. The last thing most people want at the holidays is forced team-building.

    For what it's worth, none of the company holiday parties I've attended have had games of any kind.
  • Scrunchy Face (Score:2, Interesting)

    by jonadab ( 583620 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @07:22PM (#7674416) Homepage Journal
    This scales really well to groups of various sizes containing persons of
    various ages. Just make sure that when you split teams you don't put all
    of something one one team (e.g., all of the geeks, all of the sports fans,
    all of the young people, whatever). Split all the demographics across
    both teams, and it works better.

    Here's how to play: Everybody writes names of famous persons on a bunch of
    little slips of paper, folds them once, and throws them in a big bowl. These
    can be names of current celebrities, historical figures, literary characters,
    cartoon characters, whatever, as long as they're sufficiently well-known
    that there's a decent chance several people in the room know about them.

    Then you take turns: a person from the one team, then a person from the
    other, and then another person from the first team, and so on. You get one
    minute to see how many you can get, as follows: You draw a slip of paper out,
    look at it, and then without saying any part of it yourself you must get
    someone on your team to say the name that's on the paper. If you've never
    heard of the person, it's too bad: you make a scrunchy face and try to get
    it some other way. ("Okay, the first name is the same as Ellison's first
    name, and he's something you make pickles from.") You cannot pass*. When
    you finish one, you draw another. When time runs out, you put the one you
    didn't finish back into the bowl without revealing any more about what it
    was, count how many you got, and add it to your team's score.

    This is way more fun than it sounds like. With the right group of people,
    someone can draw "Marvin K Mooney", "Alan Greenspan", and "Huldrych Zwingly"
    one after the other. Watching their face can be quite entertaining.

    * Exception: In cases of utter illegibility, when you can't make out
    the letters at all, a person from the other team can examine the slip
    and confirm that it's illegible, and you can skip it.
  • Re:Mafia!!! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by HoldmyCauls ( 239328 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @07:33PM (#7674525) Journal
    A French student taught a bunch of us a similar game, but we call it "werewolf".

    Take a standard poker deck, pull out a Joker, a Jack and a Queen, and numbered cards for the remaining players.

    The person who gets the Joker is the werewolf, The Jack is the Fortune Teller, and the Queen is the little girl.

    Everyone falls asleep (closes their eyes). The Fortune Teller wakes up, and can see one of the other players' cards. He then falls asleep again. The Werewolf wakes up, and the little girl can if she wants, but can choose not to be seen by the werewolf instead. The Werewolf then kills a villager by selecting his card and it is turned over.

    The dead are not allowed to speak (though they will, of course, be slack about it so long as they don't give everything away). The Werewolf and the little girl fall asleep again, and the town wakes up to see who's dead.

    The villagers then arbitrate and then vote on who dies, and if the Werewolf is not chosen, another round ensues.

    Variations I learned as he taught us and we played:

    Cupid: usually the King of Hearts, he can select any two people to be in love. If one of the lovers dies, the other does as well, whether by the Werewolf or the villagers.

    The Witch: (I forget which card) can choose to kill or revive anyone during her part of the night.

    Two Werewolves.

    Of course, you can't bring up a new topic without a Google:
    http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF -8&oe=UTF -8&q=Werewolf+card+game&btnG=Google+Search
  • Re:booze (Score:3, Interesting)

    by bakes ( 87194 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @08:25PM (#7675148) Journal
    if there's alcohol, a good game for later would be twister.

    I prefer to combine the two. Get a few dozen of those tiny spirit bottles, and put one on each dot. After you spin the spinner, you have to scull the drink first then put down your hand/foot.

    Standing the bottles up can be a little dangerous though. Who knows how you might fall on one?
  • Steal a gift (Score:2, Interesting)

    by rsadelle ( 719824 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @08:31PM (#7675228)
    Here's how it works: Everyone brings one gift that cost something under a pre-determined price limit (our department is doing a $15 limit, my mom's book group that doesn't read usually does $10). You write out numbers on slips of paper from 1 to n where n is the number of people in the game. 1 goes first and picks a gift from the pile and opens it. 2 can then steal 1's gift or pick a new one from the pile, and so on up to n. If your gift is stolen, you have the option of stealing one from anyone else or of picking from the pile.

    Additional rules: You can't steal back the gift that was just taken from you, and we often have a limit on how many times a gift can be stolen.

    Not only is this a ton of fun, it can also fulfill all your holiday obligations to your coworkers (as is the rule with ours at work).

    If you have too many people coming for it to be practical, you could always split people up into any number of smaller groups to play.
  • by NickFusion ( 456530 ) on Tuesday December 09, 2003 @10:53PM (#7676393) Homepage
    Yes, one of the coolest things I've found is that different groups make a totally different game of it.

    It's fascinating from a game design standpoint to watch the dynamic.

    But it's more fun to play the Compassionate Conservatism card on someone, or Scatalogical Bonus Round. Or Zebras...};^)

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