Instructions:
- In a circle or around a table, the first person tries to make a correct assumption about someone else in the group. Ex: “You’re an only child.”
- If your statement turns out to be true, the person you said it about has to drink, and you get to make another statement.
- If you’re wrong, you have to drink, and the next person in the group makes a statement.
Instructions:
- Each person or group writes down names of different famous people on individual pieces of paper.
- Switch lists with another player or group so that everyone has names written by someone else.
- One by one, hold up a piece of paper to your forehead and ask the group yes or no questions to figure out whose name you’re holding. Examples of questions: “Am I a real person?” “Am I alive/dead?” “Am I an actor/singer/influencer?” You can also play with other categories like countries, food, or movies.
- Pick a category (countries, food, animals, etc.) and a letter of the alphabet. For example: animals and the letter C.
- The first player names an animal that starts with the letter C, and the person must then name an animal beginning with the last letter of the word the previous person used. So if the first person said cat, the second person might say turtle, and the third person could say the eagle.
- Words can’t be repeated, so the game will get harder as you take turns going around the group. Each round stops when someone repeats a word or takes longer than five seconds to say something.
- Pick one person to be the psychiatrist. The psychiatrist has to leave the room so that they can’t hear or see the rest of the group, aka the patients.
- The patients have to decide on a secret ~symptom~ which every patient will pretend to have.
- Once the patients have agreed on a symptom, the psychiatrist can come back into the room.
- The psychiatrist must then question the patients freely, trying to figure out the correct diagnosis. Once they do, someone else becomes the psychiatrist, and the group chooses a new symptom. Examples of “symptoms”: -Pretending to be the person sitting to their left -Pretending to be a ’90s celebrity -Pretending to be a cartoon character Instead of answering the questions as themselves, the player would answer as whoever or whatever they’re pretending to be. Examples of questions the psychiatrist might ask: “What is your name?” “Are you a real person?” “What do you do for a living?” Instructions:
- The new members step out of the room and wait to be called in one by one by the other group members, aka the Addams Family.
- The Addams Family calls one of the new members to stand in the middle of the circle and sing the Addams Family theme tune, complete with synchronized snapping. One person says, “You must perform until we applaud.”
- The new member does whatever they think will make the Addams clap, while the Addams physically copy whatever they are doing. If person in the middle starts telling a story/joke or singing, the Addams will only copy their physical gestures, not talk/sing along with them. The copying should start out subtle, then grow more exaggerated as the game goes on.
- The game ends when the person in the middle claps so the Addams copy them.