Ahead we have long holidays, many of us will rest or travel in the company of friends. To make the holidays more fun and interesting, we offer some cool games to help you have fun, train your wits and learn a lot about each other. They do not require special props, so go ahead.
Associations.
Everyone sits in a circle, and someone says any word in the ear of his neighbor, and he should immediately say in the ear of the next one his first association with the word, the second displays the third - and so on, down the chain, until the term goes back to the first. If the "elephant" you get a "stripper, " consider the game a success.
Jenga.
Still from The Big Bang Theory.
You build a tower out of evenly spaced wooden blocks, alternating the stacking direction at each level. Then players take turns carefully pulling out one bar at a time and placing it on top of the tower. Do it very carefully. Otherwise, the building will fall. The player, as a result of whose actions the collapse occurred, is considered the loser.
Crocodile.
This is a popular game in which participants use gestures, movements, and facial expressions to show the puzzling word, and other players try to guess it. The host is not allowed to say any words or make sounds, use or point to surrounding objects, or show letters or parts of the word. The lucky one who guesses the word in the next round plays the word himself, but this time it"s different.
Contact.
The leader guesses a word and tells the other players the first letter of that word. For example, the word conceived is a catastrophe - the first letter is "K." Each of the remaining players comes up with a word beginning with that letter and tries to explain to the rest of the players exactly what he or she conceived without naming it. If one of the players understands which word the explainer has in mind, he or she says, "I have contact! " and both (the explainer and the respondent) start counting aloud to ten and then tell each his or her word. If the expression matches, then the leader calls out the second letter of the word, and the game continues, only now you have to come up with and explain the word with the initial letters already given. If the word doesn"t match, the players keep trying to think up and define a new comment.
Dunnets.
Snapshot from the TV series "Sherlock."
The good old detective game. A trivia game is a word game, a convoluted or bizarre story, a part of which the presenter tells, and the others have to reconstruct the sequence of events. Questions can only be asked that can be answered "Yes, " "No, " or "Irrelevant, " hence the name of the game. Here you can find the most interesting "trivia" games.
Games of chance.
For this type of game, I refer to all card games. You can play as well as at home with friends. Live, as well as can be played with friends on mobile devices. We often play Andar Bahar with friends andarbaharonline.com. You can play with friends on any holiday or your own when you are sad and have nothing to do.
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